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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME 



La 



INAUGURAL CEREMONIES 

OF 

Hon. WILLIAM McKINLEY, 

OF OHIO, 



Hon. garret A. HOBART, 

OF NEW JERSEY, 
AS [-"iESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. 



Washington, d. C, March 4, 1897 



EDITED AND COMPILED HY 

ROBERT SCHENCK FLETCHER 

AND 

FRED. W. EVANS. 



Copyright, 1807, by 

THE BRETT LITHOGRAPHING COMPANY, 

OF New York and Washington, D. C. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



NAMES OF INAUGURAL COMMITTEE. 



Executive Committee. 

Badgk : Gold Medal, Vclluw Ribbon, with word Executive woven in Blue. 

C. J. Bi:ll, Chairman. 

S. W. Woodward, Louis D. Wine, 



Vice-Chairmen. 



Secretary. \^ \ ^ 



John Joy Edson, Treasurer. ^ v\'S\ *^ I 



FuKi). BrackilTT, Corresponding 
Gko. H. Walker, Recording Secretary. 



Finance John W. Thompson Military Organizations, . Cecil Clay 

Reception Nelson A. Miles Printing Theo. W. Noyes 

Transportation, . Chapin Brown Banquet, .... Geo. B. Williams 

Prlss H. V. Boynion Street Illuminations and Fireworks, 

Carriages, . . . Tiios. Somerville M. I. Weller 

Civic Organizations, . B. H. Warner Ball Room Decorations, T. E. Roessle 

Parks and Reservai ions, H. A. Willard Badges S Wole 

PuBLic Comfort, . . . L. P. Wright Auditing C. F. Normeni 

Music John C. Chaney Puislic Order, . . . Jno. B. Wight 

Comfort AT Ball Room, . . J. E. Bell Street Decorations, . . . L. D. Wini- 

Invita'itons and Tickets, . Geo. Gibson Floor and Promenade, Edward McCaulev 



A. T. Britton, Chas. G. Conn, R. Ross Perry, 

-M. M. Parker, John F. Cook, A. M. Clapi', 

J. G. Berret, "W. W. Dudley, Stii.son Hutchins, 

John G. Long, Chas. C. Glover, James L. Noruis, 

Crosby S. Noyes, Lawrence Gardner, Benj. Butterworth, 

Beriah Wilkins, Henry E. Da^is, M. M. Holland. 



THE McKINLEY NAME. 

A Unique Coincidence — Hon. John McKinley — A Virginian Who Served in Both Branches 
of Congress and as Supreme Justice. 

The history of Major McKinley's rapid progress toward fame is, in its main features, 
familiar, no doubt, to thousand.s of his countrymen, but probably few i")ersons are cogni- 
zant of the fact that his elevation to the Presidency marksonc of the most unique incidents 
in the career of our illustrious men. When the President-elect takes the oath of ofiice in 
a few weeks for the most exalted position the people can give, it will be the completion 
of the McKinley name in attaining to the highest possibilities of American citizenship, 
and assuming the duties and responsibilities of official position in all three branches of 
our government. After the 4th of March we will have had a President McKinley, L'nited 
vStates Senator McKinley, Representative McKinley, and Associate Justice McKinley of 
the Supreme Court. President-elect William McKinley's prominent namesake, and no 
doubt a relative, came of Scotch-Irish antecedents. Oftentimes there are to be found in 
the official records enunciations in reports of public men with similar characteristics, 
though years may have elapsed between the service of the two. 

After a term of usefulness in the United States Senate from Alabama, in 1826-31, 
John McKinley was elected Representative in the Twenty-third Congress, serving from 
December, 1833, to March, 1S35, one of the few instances where a Senator has gone to 
the popular branch of the government, or from the Senate to the Supreme Court bench. 
At the expiration of ex-Senator and Congressman McKinley's term of office, President 
Van Buren appointed him a member of the Supreme Court, when the Ninth Judical 
Circuit was iormed. He died a member of the Court in 1852. 

The Presidentelect's distinguished namesake was born in Culpepcr County, Va., in 
1700, of Scotch-Irish parentage from Pennsylvania. The Congi-essman, Senator, and 
Supreme Court Justice moved to Kentucky,' and from there to Huntsville, Ala., in tlie 
early days of the Republic. 



NUV 14 1910 







^^<A'W*-7 ,Au«— i^ y 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



THE BIBLE TO BE USED MARCH 4. 

" The Bible upon which Major Wm. McKinley will take his oath of oflfice on the 4th of 
March as the President of the United States will be a very fine and elegant volume," said 
Bishop Arnett. "The book will be donated to Major McKinley for this purpose as the 
gift of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. It is now being printed in Cincinnati by 
the Methodist Book Publishing House. It will be handsomely bound and lined front and 
back with silk, with a suitable dedicatory inscription upon the inside. On the outside 
there will be a beautiful gold plate, in the form of a shield, on which the name of tlie 
President, the date and the name of the donors will be handsomely engraved. The Bible 
will be inclosed in a handsome box made of native Ohio wood, and gold mounted." 

THE BADGE. 

The official badge for the use of the several committees was executed in accordance 
with the design adopted and approved by the Executive Committee. It shows in the stick 
\>\xv the Capitol of the United States. To the bar of the pin is attached a yellow gold rib- 
bon, on which is woven in silk a United States flag. At the bottom of the silk is a bronze 
slide, with the words "Inauguration, March 4, 1897." On the silk above the flag are 
woven in blue the designations of the respective committees. Attached to this ribbon is 
the medal proper, in bronze, showing on the front the faces of McKinley and Iloliarl in 
relief, surrounded by beautiful scroll work, containing the names of the additional thirty- 
two States other than the original thirteen, as they were admitted into the Union. On the 
obverse side is the shield or coat of arms of the United States in heraldic form, surrounded 
by a scroll work, showing the original thirteen States, chronologically, as they adopted the 
Constitution of the United States. Each member of the committee is furnished with one 
of these badges, the name of his committee being woven into the silk as before described. 
In no other respect do the badges differ except in the case of the Executive Committee, 
the badges of which are goldplated. Three badges are pure gold, one of wliich is to be 
presented to President McKinley, one to Vice-President Hobart, and one to Chairman 
Charles J. Bell, of the Executive Committee. 

INAUGURAL BALL SOUVENIR. 

The souvenir which the Inaugural Committee w-ill give to the purchaser of each ticket 
for the ball is a marvel of art in its particular line. It is certain to receive admiration, for 
the engraving, which was done at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, is elegant in 
execution and artistic in design. The front cover contains a finely engraved picture of 
the exterior of the Pension Building, illuminated for the ball, and at the lower left-hand 
corner is a smaller design showing the interior of the building, decorated for the ball. 
Opposite is an engraving of the Capitol, and above this is the inscription in gilt letters, 
"Inaugural Ball, March 4, 1897." 

The third page shows a finely executed engraved Goddess of Liberty between 
excellent portraits of Mr. McKinley and Mr. Hobart. Beneath the President-elect is a 
picture of the Executive Mansion, and beneath the picture of the Vice-President-elect is 
the Capitol. The fourth page is blank, and the fifth page contains the names of the mem- 
bers of the Executive Committee engraved in a light brown color. The sixth page is 
blank, but on the seventh page, in the centre, is the coat of arms of the United States, 
and on either side is the Coat of arms of Ohio and New Jersey. The back cover contains 
a beautiful cloud effect, in the centre of which is the American flag. 

POLICE PROTECTION FOR VISITORS TO THE INAUGURATION. 
Capital Police Preparing for Inauguration Time. 

Extra detectives are engaged from all the large cities in the land, and summoned to 
the National Capital to keep a strict watch for crooks, and help protect the visitors from 
their nefarious tricks. Extra policemen also engaged for duty. 

Maj. Moore has invited detectives from New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, 
Pittsburg, Cincinnati, New Orleans, St. Louis, Chicago and San Francisco, and possibly 
from a few other Western cities. Two or three of Pinkerton's most famous men will be 
present. 

The local detectives are securing photos of all the well-known crooks from all over 
the country. They study these faces and familiarize themselves with them, so as to be 
able to pick them out of the crowds. All persons known to have served terms are taken 
into custody, and are detained or run out of town. 

TICKETS FOR THE INAUGURAL BALL. 

Tickets for the Inaugural Ball with Souvenirs of same and Banquet Tickets are now 
on sale at all Banks. Hotels and Railroad Stations in Washington. Price, including 
I'.anquet, $6.00 each ; without Banquet, $5.00 each. There are nojrff fiikets. They can be 
ordered from Mr. John W. Thompson, Chairman of Finance L'ommittee. through any 
National Hank in the Country on deposit of price with Bank ordering. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



THE STARS AND STRIPES. 

Meaning of the Flag and of the Colors, Red, White and Blue. 

The thirteen stripes represent the thirteen original States, New Hampshire, Massa- 
chusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, 
Delaware, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and (Georgia. The forty-five stars 
represent the States now in the Union. The number of stars changes as a new State is 
admitted, the number of stripes never changes. The colors symbolically stand for love 
(red), hope (white), loyalty (blue). These are the three standard colors for liags. — Sun. 



INAUGURATION OF FIRST PRESIDENT. 

A Simple Ceremony — Inauguration of Washington as First President — Contrast to the Coming 
Event — Little Then in the Way of Lavish Display — The Oath of Office. 

Change the last figure of A. D. 1S97 to the second place in their order of these figures, 
and it will read A. D. 1789, and back we go 108 years, and lo! our great nation has 
dwindled tj thirteen States hugging the Atlantic coast, with an uncertain hold on what we 
would now consider a small western territory. 

Yet this reversal of the telescope shows a picture in all essential points much like the 
broad canvas spread before our view to day. This embryo nation was waiting with anx- 
iety, and yet with strong faith, the completion of the organization of the federal body by 
the inauguration of George Washington as the first President of the United States, which 
event the honest men of the whole country contemplated with feelings of singular i'elicity, 
for they believed that it meant the commencement of good government — the best of bless- 
ings — under favorable auspices. 

But in one particular there is a most striking contrast between the two pictures. Now, 
the papers of the National Capital are, and have been for the past month, filled with 
accounts of the preparations for the various ceremonies which are to attend the Inaugura- 
tion of our next President, but one must search with all diligence to find any notice in the 
papers of New York, even so short a time as three weeks before, of any preparation for the 
first inaugural ceremonies, and when this first notice is found it states in a few words that 
his Excellency, John Adams — " the glory of our (Boston) town" — had lately received an 
elegant suit of American broadcloth, manufactured at Hartford, Conn., in which he was 
to make his appearance as Vice President of the United States. 

This note appeared on the same day on which the votes for President were counted in 
the Senate chamber by his Excellency John Langdon, of New Hampshire, who had been 
chosen President /;-<; tent, of the Senate, while at the same hour in the House of Repre- 
sentatives, Mr. Madison, of \'irginia. was offering his resolution from the House as a 
Committee of the Whole, " That'the following duties ought to be levied on goods, wares, 
and merchandise imported into the United States;" " On rum, all other spirituous liquors, 
teas, sugars, etc." And two days later Mr. Smith appeared before this Committee of the 
Whole with a petition from the tradesmen, manufacturers and others of the town of 
Baltimore, praying the attention of Congress to American manufactures. 

Nothing further is heard of any preparation for the inaugural ceremonies until April 
15, when the House Committee, to'whom had been referred the matter cf the proper cere- 
monial of receiving the President and Vice-President, reported that Mr. Osgood, the 
proprietor of the liouse which had been lately occupied by the President of Congress, 
should be requested to put the said house and the furniture therein in proper condition for 
the use of the President of the United States, to provide for his " temporary accommoda- 
tion "at the expense of the Government. And that a committee of three members of the 
Senate and five members of the House, should receive the President at such place as he 
should embark from the New Jersey shore for New York, and should conduct him without 
form or ceremony to the house appointed, and that at a time convenient to himself both 
Houses of Congress should receive him. 

In the matter of the reception of the Vice-President the same committee reported 
that a committee of two members from the Senate and three from the House should wait 
upon the Vice-President of the United States as soon as he arrived in the city and 
congratulate him upon his safe arrival. 

To Receive the President. 

On April 20, only ten days before the date of the inauguration of this, the first 
President of the new Republic, tiie Governor of New York, and the principal ofticers ot 
the State and City of New York met and agreed upon the arrangement for the \ii\x\. they 
were to take in the reception of the President and Vice-President. The description of 
llitse arrangements in full would not cover a quarter of a column (jf one of our daily 
papers, and on the very same day the Mayor and city troop of horse went out to Kings- 
liridgc to meet the Vice-President and escort him to the house of John Jay, where his 




MINIATURE PORTRAITS OF FORMER PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE E\ AUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



arrival was announced by the discharge of cannon. A little later Mr. Adams was 
introduced to the Senate by the President pro tern., and conducted to the chair, from 
wliich he immediately arose to make his address as first President of the Senate of llie 
United States. 

A clipping from a New York paper of April 24, 1789, says: " There arrived in the city 
yesterday the Illustrious George Washington, President of the United States, amidst the 
joyful acclamation of every party and every description of citizen." 

Washington was received at Elizabethtown, N. J., by the committees from the Senate, 
the House of Representatives, and the State and city, with whom he embarked in a barge 
built for the purpose of waiting His Excellency across the bay, and rowed by thirteen 
pilots of the harbor, dressed in white uniforms; immediately in the train of the barge 
followed a long line of barges, vessel boats from New Jersey and New York, while from 
the good ship Galveston and from the Battery roared a salute of thirteen guns. On the 
New York side he was received at the steps leading up to the water's edge by the Governor 
of New York, the State and city officials, the French and Spanish Ambassadors, and the 
various military organizations of the city, and was escorted by them, followed by a large 
concourse of citizens, to the house fitted up for him on Cherry Street. 

April 25 the House received a letter from the Vice President requesting that a com- 
mittee be appointed by the House to confer with a committee of the Senate as to the time, 
place and manner in which the oath of office should be administered to the President, 
whereupon the House resolved itself into a committee of the whole for the consideration 
of the momentous question, and a bill was passed and sent to the Senate on April 28, and 
was at once passed by the Senate. 

Agreeably to the joint resolution of both Houses of Congress, the ceremony of inaugu- 
ration took place on April 30. At 9 a. m. the church bells rang, and the clergy of the dif- 
ferent denominations assembled their congregations and offered prayersfor thesafetv and 
honor of the President. 

The Inaugural Parade. 

At 12 M. the two houses of Congress assembled in their respective chambers, and the 
members of the House, headed by the Speaker, immediately proceeded to the .Senate, 
there to await the coming of the President, who at the same hotir left his house on Cherry 
Street with an escort arranged as follows : 

Col. Lewis, supported by two officers. 
Capt. Stakes, with the Troop of Horse. 
Artillery. 
Maj. Van Home. 
Grenadiers, under Capt. Harfin. 
German Grenadiers, under Capt. Scriba 
Maj. Bicker. 
The Infantry of the Brigade. 
Maj. Christie. 
Sheriff. 
The Committee of the Senate. 
The President and Suite. 
The Committee of the House. 
The Hon. Mr. Jay, Gen. Kno.x, Chancellor Livingston, and several other gentlemen 
of distinction. 

DAUGHTERS OF OUR PRESIDENTS. 

The Oldest Presided at the White House over Half a Century ago. 

In an exceedingly interesting article in the February Ladies' Home Joitrnal it'i&re- 
callcd that there are eight surviving daughters of Presidents of the LTnited States, in ad- 
dition to the three of President and Mrs. Cleveland. Mrs. Letitia Tyler Semple is the 
eldest of the group, and Mrs. Philip Pendleton Dandridge is the next. The former is the 
daughter of President Tyler, and is living in the Louise Home, Washington, D. C. Mrs. 
Dandridge is the daughter of President Taylor, and presided at most of the White House 
functions during her father's brief occupancy — a little over a year; she lives in Winchester, 
Va. The only surviving daughter of President Johnson, Mrs. Martha Johnson Patterson, 
lives in the old Johnson homestead at Greenville, Tenn. Mrs. Ellen W. Grant Sartoris, 
the only daughter of President Grant, is now living in this country — since the death other 
husband — in Washington, I). C. The only daughter of President Hayes, Miss Fanny 
Hayes, passes much of the winter in travel, and spends her summer at the Hayes home- 
stead, in Fremont, Ohio. Mrs. Mary Garfield Stanley-Brown, the " Little MoUie" of the 
Garfield family, lives in Washington during the winter, and at the old family homestead, 
in Ohio, in the summer. The only daughter of President Arthur, Miss Ellen Hei-ndon 
Arthur, lives in Albany N. Y., with an aunt, and spends much time in travel. Mrs. Mary 
Harrison McKee, the only daughter of President Harrison, lives at Saratoga, N. Y. and 
the Cleveland children, of course, are at home in the White House. 




MINIATURE PORTRAITS OF FORMER PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. 



lo OFFICIAL J'ROGFAMME OF THE IXAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



WEATHER IN MARCH. 
How the Elements Have Acted on Past Inauguration Days. 

Chairman Bell received the following interesting contribution to inauguration literature 
in the shape of a letter from Chief Willis L. Moore of the Weather Bureau, giving the 
weather conditions on each 4th of March from 1S71. There were ten stormy fourths and 
sixteen fair or clear days in the twenty-six recorded years. During the period there were 
six inauguration days. Grant, in 1873; Hayes, in 1877, and Cleveland, in 1885, had fair 
days. Garfield, in I'SSi; Harrison, in 1889, and Cleveland, in 1893, had stormy days. 

The table which accompanies Mr. Moore's letter shows the details of the weather on 
the inauguration days as follows: When Grant was inaugurated the second time, in 1873, 
the maximum temperature was 20, the minimum 4; a wind from the northwest reached a 
maximum velocity of twenty-four miles an hour; it was clear. Old residents of Washing- 
ton well remember how bitterly cold the day was. Many men marching in the parade 
dropped out on account of the intense cold, and at the Inauguration Ball held that night, 
in a frame structure erected for the purpose in Judiciary Square, at the intersection of 
\\ Street, which then ran directly through the reservation, and was fenced on either side, 
and 4th street northwest, women danced in their wraps, and men in their overcoats, and 
dishes at supper, intended to be served hot, were ice-like when they reached the table. 

On Hayes' Inauguration Day, 1877, the highest temperature was 56 and the lowest 35. 
The wind blew 30 miles an hour from the northwest. There was light rain from 12.45 to 
7 .A.M., but the rest of the day was clear. 

March 4, 18S1, when Garfield came in, the thermometer registered 36 maximum ard 
,9 minimum. The wind was west and northwest, and reached a velocity of 20 miles. It 
was partly cloudy, with snow and rain until 10 .'\.m. 

Cleveland's first Inauguration Day in 1885 was almost perfect. The temperature was 
58 high and 36 low. An ii-mile-an-hour breeze blew from the north. 

When Mr. Harrison was inaugurated in 1889, there was rain all daj^ and it had been 
raining for two days before steadily. Decorations were ruined and drenched; crowds 
watched bedraggled thousands march over soaked concrete. The maximum temperature 
was 44; minimum, 34, and the northeast wind reached a velocity of 28 miles an hour. 

Cleveland's second Inauguration Day, in 1893, was ushered in with a snow squall from 
the northwest, during which the wind blew 35 miles an hour. The thermometer was at 
freezing point, 32 at its highest and 24 at its lowest. The sky cleared about i o'clock r. m., 
and when the Inaugural Procession moved from the Capitol everybody took it to be 
another instance of "Cleveland luck," and this remark was general. The last three 
fourths of March have been very pleasant days, there being a shower only early in the 
morning of the day in 1895. 

THE ONLY SURVIVING WIDOWS OF REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS. 

"Seven women are still drawing pensions as the widows of men who saw active 
service in the war of the Revolution; women whose husbands served under Washington 
more than a hundred and twenty years ago. The eldest of these surviving widows of the 
Revolution is living at Los Angeles, Cal. She is Mrs. Lovey Aldrich, now in the ninety- 
eighth year of her age. Her husband was Private Caleb Aldrich, who was born in the 
year 1763, and served as a soldier boy in the New England campaigns of the war. Mrs. 
Nancy Jones, of Jonesboro, Tenn., whose husband was Darling Jones, a private 
in one of the North Carolina regiments, is the j^oungest of the Revolutionary widows, 
being now about eighty-three yearsof age. The other five are Nancy Cloud, whois living 
at Chum. Va., and is the widow of Sergeant William Cloud, of Captain Christian's 
Virginia Line; Esther S. Damon, of Plymouth L^nion, Vt., whose husband was Private 
X'oah Damon, of Massachusetts; Mary Snead, living at Parksley, Va., widow of Private 
l')Owdoin Snead; Nancy A. Weatherman, who lives at Elk Mills, Tenn., and whose first 
husband was Robert Glascock, a fifer in one of the Virginia regiments; and Rebecca 
Mayo, living at Newbern, Va., widow of Stephen Mayo, a soldier from Virginia. That 
these women can be the widows of Revolutionary soldiers is readily understood in view 
of the fact that their husbands were well on in years when they married. As, for example, 
when Esther Sumner married Noah Damon in the year 1835 — fifty-two years after the 
close of the war — she was but twenty-one, while he was seventy-six. The last Revolu- 
tionary widow pensioner who had married prior to the close of the war, and had therefore 
actually lived during Revolutionary times, was Nancy Serena, widow of Daniel I". Bake- 
man. She died about twenty-seven years ago, only a year or two after her husband, who 
was the last of the Revolutionary soldiers on the pension roll. — Ladies ' Home J-.trnal. 

EQUESTRIAN STATUES IN THE WORLD. 

There are fewer equestrian statues than one imagines. In this country there are only 
thirteen such statues, so far as the guide books show. In Europe there are about forty ; 
thirty-four a few years ago, and others have been erected since. That makes fewer than 
sixtv equestrian statues in the world. Of tlie thirteen in the United States the city of 
Wa.shington has seven. This historical fact will be of interest to the thousands of visitors 
to the Inauguration. 




THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT. 



12 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE [.\AUGUR\I. CERh.MON I IS. 



INAUGURATION BALL AND DINNER, 

MARCH 4th, 1837. 

Hon. MARTIN VAN BUREN, of New York, Hon. R. M. JOHNSON, of Kentuck; 

President. Vice-President. 



{From the National Intelligencer.') 



INAUGURATION liALL. to be given on the 4th Maroh 
:it Carusi's Saloon. 

MANAGERS. 
Hon. W. R. King Hon. J. K. Polk 

Hon. L. Lyon Hon. B. C. Howard 

General Van Ness Hon. A. \ anderpoel 

Thomas L. Smith Hun. J. li. Sutherland 

F. I'. Blair R. Lawrence 

P. T. Ellieott C. Hagner 

George Brent, of A. Nath. Rice 

J. Hobtie Theo Kane 

Hon. M. Dickerson Peter Force 

Gen. Macomb Gen. A. Hunter 

Commodore Chauncey A. Dickins 
General Towson Robert Kerr 

Colonel Bomford S. Pleasonton 

Dr. J. M. Foltz Osb. Sprigg 

Jno. Magruder John C. Graham 

Captain Simonton F. V. Yovenett. 

Tickets of admission to be had of the Managers. 
Subscribers are requested to call at Mr. Fischer's Fancy stora 
and procure their tickets of admission. Non-sub.scribers can 
procure tickets of admission upcm application to the managers. 
'l^^ The managers are particularly reciuested to meet at Ca- 
rusi's Saloon this evening at 5 o'clock. mar 3 



I N A V G r R A T I O >' DINNER. 

Committee of Ari-angements. 

Gen. John P. Van Ness Henry M. Morfit 
Major A. G. Glvnn Col. D. A. A. Buck 

John Ward ' Maj. H. C. Williams 

|ohn N. Moulder Wm. H. Dietz 

John A. Donohoo "W. A. Manning 

J. H. Smoot Maj. Thos. R. Reily 

G. Ennis Owen Connelly 

J. W. Maury Thomas Smallman 

John C. Rives Col. H. Hungerford 

Captain J. A. Blake James Maher 

Francis Ward Capt. H. Dumas. 

Ambrose Lynch 
Geo. H. Smoot 1 
Richard Stanton - of Alexandria. 
Robert Brockett \ 
Those friends to the cause who are desirous of participating 
in the dinner upon this occasion, can become subscribers by ap- 
plying to any one of the Committee of Arrangements. 

All democratic members of Congress and strangers now in 
the metropolis ; all democratic citizens and thoseof the vicinity, 
who may not have had an opportunity to subscribe, are invited 
to participate. 

Price of tickets, $3— to be had of either of the Committee of 
Arrangements, and at Gadsby'.s. Brown's, Fuller's, and ALiher's 
Hotels. JOHN N. MOULDER, Chairman. 

J. H. Smoot, ( „ " . 
WM. H. DIKTZ, 1 'Secretaries. 

G. Ennis, Treasurer. 



OFFICIAL rROGRAMMF OF HIE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 13 




THE FIRST INAUGURATION OF GENERAL (,EUKGE WASHINGTON AT NEW YORK. 

A NOVEL FEATURE OF THE INAUGURAL PARADE-INDIAN BOYS FROM 

THE CARLISLE SCHOOL. 

Their appearance in the great Columbian parade in Chicago October 20, 1892, was 
the signal for great outbursts t)f applause from the spectators, and the accounts of their 
appearance in the papers teemed with complimentary notices of them. The Chicago 
Herald oi October 21, 1892, contained the following graphic picture of the appearance of 
the Carlisle students on that occasion: 

" The battalion from the Carlisle Indian School led the division. Their own band of 
thirty-one pieces marched at the head and played remarkably good music. The leader, 
Dennison Wheelock, is an Oneida Indian. Captain Pratt was in command, with W. P. 
Campbell, disciplinarian, as second in command. There were 305 boys in the Battalion, 
including the band. In their neat blue uniforms, trimmed with red, they looked well, 
while their marching was excellent. They were divided into ten divisions, and instead of 
arms they carried the implements of industry. The first division represented education, 
the boys carrying slates, books, and other appropriate emblems. The Painters formed the 
second division, and they had their brushes, paint pots, and other paraphernalia. Then 
came the Farmers, bearing on poles sheaves of wheat, ears of corn, bunches of onions, and 
farming implements. The Bakers followed with loaves of bread, kneading boards, and 
whatever else a baker requires. The Carpenters formed the fifth division, and saws, 
adzes, planes and hammers formed their equipment. The Blacksmiths in the sixth 
division had miniature anvils and forges, and the Shoemakers in the front rank of the 
seventh carried awls and cobblers' tools, while the rear rank had mounted on poles all the 
different kinds of shoes they manufacture. The eighth division was composed of Harness 
Makers, and in addition to the implements of the trade several .sets of harness were borne 
aloft. The Tinners were in the ninth division, and it would have done Governor 
McKinley's heart good to have seen the array of pots and pans of home manufacture. 
The Tailors brought up the rciir, and they carried the different parts of the uniforms 
which the boys wear and which they make. The display made by these boys was one of 
the prettiest sights of the parade, and cheer after cheer greeted them whenever they 
appeared." A similar display will l)e made at Washington on March 4th, 1897, bv the 
Carlisle boys, and promises to be one of the most interesting features of the Inaugural 
Parade. 



14 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



ITINERARY TRIP OF PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT TO WASHINGTON. 
Major McKinley Will be Accompanied by the Eighth Ohio Regiment. 

Major McKinley's militarv escort t ) Washington has been selected. Col. George A. 
Garretson of Cleveland, Chairman of the Committee on escort to the President-elect, has 
oflficially notified Col. George B. Gyger of Alliance, Ohio, commanding the 8th Infantry, 
Ohio National Guard, that "the personal military escort of President elect McKinley from 
Canton to Washington will be composed of the' 8th Infantry and Troop A of Cleveland, 
Ohio, commanded by Capt. R. E. Burdick. Upon arrival in Washington, the 8th Infantry 
will act as personal escort from the .Station to the Ebbilt House, after which the Regi- 
ment will take its place in line with the Ohio Troops. Such other personal military 
escort duty as may be required during the inaugiiral ceremonies will be performed by 
Troop A. The 8th' Regiment Infantry, Ohio National Guard, is composed of Companies 
situated in the various'counties which Major McKinley has represented in Congress. Of 
the twelve Companies composing the Regiment, three Companies and the Ho.spital Corps 
and Signal Corps are situated at Canton, the regimental Band being stationed at Akron. 

Troop A, of Cleveland, which will act as personal escort to the President-elect in the 
inauguration parade, will leave Cleveland over the Cleveland and Pittsburg Railway on a 
special. At Alliance the train will join the inaugural train from Canton, running slightly 
in advance of it to the Capital. 

In addition to the President-elect and Mrs. McKinley, those who will be in the 
Presidential party, and for whom apartments are being prepared at the Ebbitt House, are 
Mrs. McKinley and Miss McKinley, mother and sister of the President-elect ; Miss (irace 
McKinley and Mr. James McKinley, his niece and nephew ; his brother, Abner McKinley, 
with his' wife and daughter; Mrs. Barber, a sister of Mrs. McKinley, and her family ; Mr. 
and Mrs. .Shells, the latter also a sister of Mrs. McKinley; Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Enderly, 
a sister and brother-in-law of Mr . McKinley ; Mr. W. K. Enderly, a nephew; Mr. and Mrs. 
George Morse, of San Francisco, the latter being a niece of the President-elect ; Judge 
and Mrs. Day, of Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette McWilliams and family, Hon. William 
M. Hahn and Mrs. Hahn, Lieut. H. O. S Heistrand, Military Secretary to the President- 
elect ; Mrs. Heistrand, and their father and mother; Senator-elect C. W. Fairbanks, of 
Indiana; Dr. Phillips, Mr. McKinley"s physician; Mr. W. A. Dunlop and party, Mr. James 
Boyle, Secretary ; Mr. Joseph Smith, Secretary ; General and Mrs. Osborn and child, Mr. 
and Mrs. Loring and child, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Pope, Mr. and Mrs. Osborn and Mr. 
Walter Osborn, Mr. 1>. F. McKinley and Mr. McKinley, ol San Francisco, uncle and cousin 
of the President-elect, and Private Secretary A. J. Porter and family. 

The Vice -President-elect's Escort — The First Troop of New Jersey. 

The Militia title of the organization in the guard is First Troop. They will bring 
sixty or seventy men, with their horses, and will act as an escort to Vice-President 
Hobart. The organization is the crack cavalry troop of New Jersey. 

President-elect McKinley will arrive in Washington March 2, II a.m. 
The special train carrying the President-elect and party will leave Canton at 7 p.m. 
March i, instead of 3 p.m., as heretofore announced. It will reach Pittsburg at 10:15 
p.m., Baltimore at 9:40 the following morning, and arrive in Washington at it a.m. 
The train will consist of a baggage car, dining car, two Pullmans and two private cars. 

Car President-elect McKinley Will Travel In. 

President-elect McKinley will go from Canton to Washington in a remarkable car. It 
is a private car without a name, save that it is known all over the Panhandle system as 
"No. 38." The walls of it are wdiite oak planked solid instead of the usual studding. If 
it should roll down an embankment the sides would not break, and it would resist almost 
anv kind of shock in a collision. The top is a double framework of steel, and the ceiling 
is thoroughly cushioned. The doors are four thicknesses of white oak. The entire car is 
a huge safety box. The chief luxury of the interior is the i)erfect arrangement of every- 
thing pertaining to human comf<n-t. It has an old-fashioned log fireplace, and two pala- 
tial bedroom apartments, and a bath opening from each chamber. There is a magnificent 
silver sjirvice and a large collection of rare china. 

To Bring Vice-President-elect Hobart to Washington. 
The railroad arrangements for conveying Vice-Presilent-elect Garret A. Hobart and 
hi ; party to Washington on March 2 have been completed. Two ]irivate cars, one dining- 
room car, and one baggage car will make up the special train. The private cars are the 
Atlas belontring to J. Rogers Maxwell, President of the Central Railroad of New Jersey, 
and Vhe Philadelphia, the propertv of President Harris, of the Philadelphia and Reading 
Railroad. The dining-room and baggage cars belong to the Royal Blue Line. I he party, 
consisting of the Vice-President-elect and his family, will leave from the foot of Liberty 
Street at 11 o'clock, and go direct to Washington, where they will arrive at 4 o clock in 
the afternoon, and be received by a sub-committee of the Inaugural Committee The 
I-irst Troop of New Jersey will escort the Vice-President-elect from the railroad station to 
the Arlington Hotel, on Vermont Avenue, which will be Mr. Hobarfs headquarters 1 he 
Vice-Presidential party will consist of twenty-five people, including Gov. Griggs and statt. 



i6 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



FLORAL DECORATIONS, INAUGURAL BALL, BY J. H. SMALL & SONS, 
WASHINGTON AND NEW YORK. 

Music Stand. — On the golden-colored material covering the music stands will be placed 
traceries of asparagus, plumosa, plaques of flowers, roses, tulips, narcissus, liliums, etc., 
and artistic effects made with Amphion or Roman wreaths of gilded Andromeda leaves, 
caught up with ribbons; and growing palms about the stands, in keeping with their other 
decorations. 

Orchestra. Stand. — This stand, in imitation of the Golden Gateway of the World's Fair, 
will be most elaborately decorated with plaques, Roman wreaths, asparagus, plumosa and 
(lowers. An immense eagle, holding ribbons in its beak, bearing the names of "McKinley" 
and " Hobart," will be one of the features of this stand. 

The Fountain. — In and about the spray a grotto of cork bark and rocks will be built, 
in which will be growing aquatic plants, ferns, lilies, and vines. Around the edge, which 
will be aboui three feet high, will be blooming plants, palms, ferns, etc. 

Large Columns. — The eight large columns in centre of court will each have massed at 
the base, golden yellow flowering plants, genistas, acacias, jonquils, tulips, etc., and 
above these, about ten feet from the floor, will be placed high graceful growing palms, 
reaching twenty or twenty-five feet from the floor, the upper portions of the columns being 
left bare, except for their own ornamentation. 

The Balconies. — Over and above the columns will be trailed Southern and Alabama 
smilax. In front of the balconies, at intervals to conform with flag decorations, will be 
plaques of Sabal palms, leaves, and flowers, alternated with artistic eff^ects in Louis XVI. 
wreaths, caught up with the National colors. Vases on the top gallery will be filled with 
tropical palm leaves, palms, and other growing plants. On the walls in rear of the 
balconies will be frieze effects of laurel festoons, caught up with green wreaths and 
traceries of Southern smilax. 

Corners of the Ground Floor. — Here, about ten feet above the floor, will be groups of 
huge palms and growing flowering plants of various kinds. 

The Stairways. — The stairway leading from the ground floor to second balcony walls 
will be thatched with evergreens, giving an arbor effect, with singing birds in cages among 
the branches. 

President's and Diplomatic Rooms. — To be decorated with palms, asparagus, plumosa, 
and other greens ; orchids, American beauty and bridesmaid roses, tulips, jonquils, 
acacia, genistas, etc., using Victor wreaths and effects in ribbons and plaques of flowers 
on side walls and wherever artistic effects can be produced. 

General Information. 

Marshals and their aids in the Inaugural Parade will be designated as follows: 

Grand Marshal— Sa,sh of Red, White and Blue. 

Grand Marshal's Stakk — Sash of Red. 

Grand Marshal's Aids — Sash of White. 

Marshals of Grand Divisions — Sash of Red and White. 

Marshals of Divisions — Sash of Blue and Red. 

Marshals of Brigades — Sash of Blue and White. 

All Aids except those of the Grand Marshal— Sash of Blue. 

The sashes will be worn from the left shoulder to the right side. 



Uniform of Aids to the several Marshals. 

Military Aids will appear in the full dress uniform of their rank. 

Civilian Aids— The dress will be high silk hat, black Prince Albert coat, dark trousers, 
buff leather gloves, and spurs. 

Both military and civilian aids will provide themselves with white sash, badg^ 
saddle-cloth, and bridle rosettes of uniform pattern. These articles will cost seven ($7) 
dollars, and will be ready for issue at headquarters on and after Februarv 25, upon pav- 
ment of the amount. - -■ i 

In order to provide for those who do not intend to bring their horses with them, a 
number of ruling horses have been engaged in Washington, equipped with saddles and 
bridles, which can be had for the day at a cost of Sio each. Aids desiring to hire them 
should send word at once to these headquarters. . 

By command of (Jen. Horace Porter. 

A. Noel Blakem.vx, Chief of Staff. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 17 



Unexcelled for 
Quality and Wear. 




A t all First=Class 
Retail Stores. 



1 8 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



GENERAL INFORMATION. 



THE BALL. 

Pension Building, Fifth and F Streets N.W., Evening of March 4. 

Doors will kf, Opkned at 8 o'clock. P.M. Concert will Begin at 8.30 P.M. 

Sui'i'ER Rooms will uk Opened at 9.30 P.M., and Banquet Served until Close ok Ball. 
THE PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT WILL BE RECEIVED AT 9.30 P.M. 

The Ball Room. 

The decorations of the ball-room will be beautiful, and embrace an artistic combina- 
tion of plants and flowers, the effect of which is heightened by the background of white 
and gold bunting, and the delicate rays of thousands of miniature electric lights. In the 
plan of decoration prominence is given first to the floral display; second, the bunting and 
armor pieces, and third, the electric illumination. By thus subjecting the bunting and 
electric displays to the floral decorations, the beauty of the latter is enhanced, as also the 
costumes of the ladies, the colors of which are too frequently nullified by the dazzling 
efl^ect of a superabundance of electric lights. 

The Reception of Presidential Party. 

The President and Vice-President will be escorted by Mr. Charles J. Bell, Chairman, 
Mr. Samuel W. Woodward and Mr. Louis D. Wine, Vice-Chairmen, of the Inaugural 
Committee, from the Executive Mansion to the Pension Building, where the Presidential 
Party will be received by General Nelson A. Miles and the members of the Reception 
Committee, and escorted to rooms reserved for invited guests. About 10.30 o'clock the 
President and his party, escorted by the Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the Reception 
Committee, with such other members of the Reception Committee as may be designated, 
also the Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the Floor Committee, with special aids forming 
the escort, will make a tour of the ball-room. 

Promenade Concert Programme. 

The promenade music for the Ball will be furnished by Victor Herbert's Twentj^-second 
Regiment Band, N. Y. S. N. G. (late Gilmore's Band), of sixty-five pieces, and the 
orchestral music by William A. Haley's Washington Concert Band, of 125 pieces. 

Ball Room Regulations. 

The entire range of rooms on the northwest quarter of the Ball Room floor, exclud- 
ing the room immediately adjoining the G Street entrance, will be devoted to hat, cloak, 
barber and boot-blacking rooms for gentlemen. Rooms for ladies' wraps will be in the 
routhwest quarter of the Ball Roojii floor. In the rooms to the east of the (i Street en- 
trance will be served the supper. The President's supper room will be at the northeast 
corner of the building ; adjoining it on the south the supper room for distinguished guests. 
In the room immediately adjoining the G Street entrance will be the headquarters of the 
Committee on Public Order, a place for ice water, and a bureau of information. Adjoin- 
ing the F Street entrance will be another bureau of information, where articles lost and 
found will be registered. The Committee on Carriages will have their headquarters at 
this point also. A room at the southeast corner of the Ball Room floor will be used as a 
hospital, under the management of the Committee on Public Order, where physicians and 
trained nurses will be in waiting to attend any cases of sickness or accident. The room 
will be furnished with cots and all necessary appliances for hospital practice. The force 
of police and firemen on duty at the Ball will be stationed immediately adjoining the G 
Street entrance, next to the stairway. 

On the second floor the room at the southwest corner will be occupied by the Presi- 
dent, and the adjoining room on the east will be the Reception Room for the President and 
Vice-President. The Diplomatic Corps will occupy the next room to the east. The Recep- 
tion Committee will be found in the room adjoining the President's room, on the west side 
of the building. The Chairman of the Inaugural Committee will make his headquarters 
next to the Fifth Street stairway, the Executive Committee in the room next to the north, 
with its secretaries in a smaller room at the northwest corner of the building. Adjoin- 
ing the last named room will be the headquarters of the Floor and Promenade Committee. 
The Press will be located on the second floor, near tlie F Street stairway, adjoining the 
headquarters of the Committee on Carriages. Iti the remaittini:; rooms of the no> th sec- 
tion of the second floor, as much space as ])ossible will be allowed for chairs as resting 
places for the public. There will be no seats in the galleries. They will be used exclu- 
sively for promenades. 







;»i 







?A^ 



20 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



Rules. 

1. The entrances will be at F, G and Fifth Street doors. 

2. Positively no return checks. 

3. No smoking allowed in the building. 

4. All articles found should be handed to some member of the Floor Committee, or 
left at bureau of information, at elevator entrance. 

5. No charge in cloak rooms. 

6. No hats, bonnets, overcoats, or cloaks allowed to be worn on the Ball Room floor, 
nor any canes or umbrellas to be carried. 

7. Persons not allowed to stand about floor of Ball Room during dancing. 

Badges of Committees Connected with the Ball. 

Executive Committee, gold badge. 

All sub-committees, bronze badges, with name of committee woven in silk ribbon. 

Police Headquarters and Bureau of Information. 

Police Headquarters and Bureau of Information, at the east of the G Street 
entrance. 

Carriages. 

Guests in public carriages (two horses) will arrive and depart by the North or G Street 
entrance, taking the first conveyance at hand. 

Those in herdics, cabs, coupes (one horse), and street cars will enter and depart by 
the South or F Street entrance, taking the first conveyance at hand. 

Those in private conveyances will enter and depart by the Fifth Street or West 
entrance. Consult diagram on opposite page. 



Order of Opening Exercises. 

Promenade music by 

Victor Herbert's 22D Regiment Band, N. Y. S. N. G. 

(Late Gilmore's Band.) 

Orchestral music by 
Wm. a. Haley's Washington Concert Band. 



Promenade Concert. 

Wagner 



1. Overture — Tannhiiuser, . 

Band. 

2. Selection — Faust, .... Gounod 

Orchestra. 

3. Second Hungarian Rhapsodie, Liszt 

Band. 



Luitncr 



4. Overture — Fast, 
Orchestra. 

5. Grand American Fantaisie, 

V. Herbert 
Band. 

6. Selection — Wizard of the Nile, 

Herbert 
Orchestra. 



Order of Dancing. 



1. Waltz — Return of Spring, Waldteufel 12. 

2. Promenade — The Gold Bug, 13. 

Victor Herbert 14. 

3. Lancikrs— A Gaiety Girl, Jones 15. 

4. Waltz — Artist Life, . Strauss 

5. Promenade — Spanish Dance, 16. 

Moszkowski 17. 

0. Quadrille — Joti Jou, . . . Gungl 18. 

7. Two-Stei' — El Capitan, . . Sousa 

8. PRo.MENAi)K — Selections, 19. 

Gems from " Carmen," . . Bizet 20. 

Waltz — La Berceuse . . Waldteufel 21. 
TyANciERS^International . Moses 

Promenade — Hungarian Czardas, 22. 

Grossmann 23. 



9- 

TO. 
II. 



Two-Step — White Flyer, . . Haley 
Waltz — Symposia, . . . Bendi.x 
Quadrille — Militaire, . . Strauss 
Promenade— Grand Fantaisie, 

"Faust," . . Gounod 
Waltz — Princess Bonnie, . Spencer 
Lanciers — Robin Hood, . DeKoven 
Promenade — The American Girl, 

Victor Herbert 
Two-Step— Black America, . Zickel 
Waltz— My Dream, . . . Strauss 
Promenade — (irand Finale from 

"William Tell." . . Rossini 
Two-Stkp — Semper I'Mdelis, , Sousa 
Wai.'iz — Auf Wiedersehen, . I'^aker 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 21 




H Ipeifect Corset. 
Novelties in the Genuine Pansy Corset, 



FOR RIDING, CYCLING, 




AND THE 



Latest Paris Straight Front and Empire Designs. 



Pansy Corset Shop, g« ^- Broadway and 2 0th street.^ 



-New York City. 



22 Oll-rCIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INA UGURA L CEREMON lES. 



Bill of Fare, served by C, G. Essner, of Philadelphia. 

Raw Oysters in Ice. 

Consomme in Cups. Broiled Oysters. 

Clysters a la Poulette. 

Chicken Cutlets. Sweetbread Patties. 

Terrapin, Philadelphia Style. 

Chicken vSalad, Lobster Salad, Crab Salad. 

Tongue, Smithtield Hani. 

Game Patties, Boned Turkey, Pate de Foie Gras. 

Assorted Sandwiches. 
Vanilla Ice Cream, Chocolate Ice Cream. 

Lemon Ice. 

Roman Punch. Assorted Cakes. 

Fruit. Johannis Water. Coffee. 



Floor and Promenade Committee. 

Badge : Bronze Medal, Yellow Ribbon, with word Floor woven in Blue. 

Edward McCauley, Chairman and Director. 

Wm. H. Emory, Vice-Ch airman. 

Edwin B. Hay, Vice-Chairman. 



Woodbury Blair 
Charles Bispham 
Willard H. Brownson 
Charles H. Davis 
Green Clay Goodloe 



John A. Baker 
W. V. R. Berry 
Norman Bestor 
John M. Biddle 
Alexander Britton 
T. Sanford Beatty 
Thomas M. Chatard 
Robert S. Chew 
Robert S. Chilton 
Elisha Dyer, Jr. 
George W. Evans 



Special Aids. 

Gaillard Hunt 
Francis B. Loring 
Charles L. McCawley 
Carroll Mercer 
Charles H. Poor 



F. P. B. Sands 
Joseph P. Sanger 
Ward Thoron 
Ma.xwell WoodhuU 



Aids in charge of Sections and Corridors. 



Wm. H. Everett 
Thomas M. Gale 
Walter Gait 
E. A. Garlington 
(ieorge Hellen 
George Howard 
George T. Howland 
Ralph Jenkins 
Alex. F. Magruder 
Frederick May 
W. H. Moses 
Aulick Palmer 



Seaton Perrv 
P. Lee Phillips 
John C. Poor 
Clary Ray 
Robert C. Ray 
Thos. Slidell Rogers 
Colin Studds 
Sidney A. Staunton 
J. G. Turnbull 
John F. Wilkins 
John Sidney Webb 



Addison, A. C. 
Aplin, S. A., Jr. 
Addison, A. D. 
Alger. Philip R. 
Allen, James B. 
Ashton, J. Hubley 
Arnold, Eugene F. 
Aiken, Martin 
Aspinwall, Clarence 
Armes, Henry B. 
Armstrong, Alex.. Jr. 
Ahern, William B. 
Brackett, G. Fred 
Barnes, Geo. A. 
Brown, J. Stanley 
Billings, L. G. 
Brown, G. R. 
Baumgras, E. C. 
Baker, C. A. 
Brj-an, C. E. 
Barross, J. V. 



Members of Floor Committee. 

Ball, Chas. A. 
Brown, Geo. W. 
Bacon, C. Fred 
Bergen, Thurlow 
Benner, H. A. 
Bradley, A. Y. 
Britton, William 
Brenner, Walter M. 
Bloomer, Geo. C. 
Brice, Arthur T. 
Booze, W. S. 
Boyd, W. (;. 
Burnett, S. M. 
Burchell, N. Landon 
Beall. John J. 
Beall, John E. 
Blair, John S. 
Bailey, Marcellus 
Beale, Buchanan 
Beale, J. Forbes 
Bright, O. Percy 



Beale, Truxton 
Bradford, Fenton 
Blair, Montgomerv 
Barnacle, F. W. 
Blair, John S. 
Buckingham, Hiram 
Bowers, Edward A. 
Bradley, George L. 
Broome, George Cochran 
Brown, Jesse 
Buckingham, B. H. 
Beck, Henry K. 
Beyer, Louis, Jr. 
Cook, G. Wvthe 
Criswell, F.'H, 
Christman, Howard L. 
Gushing, Alfred D. 
Cropper, John 
Collier, John T. S. 
Conley, Wm. H. 
Crosby, O. F. 



<>/-r/C/AL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 23 




NIGHT doses the tired eyes and br}n§;s sleep to 
restless ones. The morning bringfs renewed 
strength and vigor for the work of another 
day. But how of those to whom the restless days 
are followed by restless nights and broken sleep brings 
no refreshing awakening? Scott's Emulsion does for 
sick people ivhai night does for <iuell people. It gives 
refreshment and strength because it supplies the body 
with just the food it needs^ the food to make rich 
blood, healthy nerves and sound digestion. 

For sale by all druggists at 50 cents and $1.00 
SCOTT & BOWNE, Mfg. Chemists, NEW YORK CITY 



,..^" 



"nrjjzirjx??^ 






24 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



Members of Floor Committee — Continued. 



Cooper, George 
Crouch, E. D. 
Casey, Thos. L., Jr. 
Clymer, W. B. S. 
Carlisle, Logan 
Cable, Benjamin T. 
Carlisle, Calderon 
Colegate, George Gibson 
Culver. A. E. 
Cunningham, Seymour 
Colwell, Jno. C. 
Coles, Malcolm A. 
Cassell, R. E. 
Carlton, C. C. 
Colgate, George E. 
Cox, John F. 
Crane, Augustus 
Cralle, Jefferson B. 
Clover, Richardson 
Caulfield, James P. 
Caldwell, David D. 
Clay, F. W. H. 
Crary, Jay D. 
Craig, David M. 
Denny, Frank L, 
Dulaney, H. R. 
Darling, George A. 
Dryenforth, Mitchell 
Domer, Chas. S. 
Detweiler, Meade D. 
Deale, H. B. 
Davidge, W. D., Jr. 
Downs, N. Carroll 
Dove, J. Maury 
Dodge, Pickering 
Davis, Henry E. 
Davenport, Richard G. 
De Peyster. Johnston L. 
Dnhiney, Wm. F. 
Dunn, George 
Drew, John W. 
Darneille, H. H. 
Dulin, Chas. G. 
De Knight, Clarence W. 
Duvall, Andrew B., Jr. 
Earle, H. M. 
Earle, Lewis J. 
Edwards, Burr N 
Ellis, Wm. K. 
Edson, John Joy, Jr. 
Engle, Norman T. 
Ellerson, James R. 
Endicott, W. C, Jr. 
Ford, Worthington C. 
Foote, T. M. 
Fleming, Robert L 
Fleming, A. W. 
Fletcher, Robert vS. 
Foster. Robert S., Jr. 
Fowler, Sherman B. 
Green, James M. 
Gerau, IClmer IL 
Green, James B. 
Green, Bernard 
Gatlcy, H. Prescott 
Gait, Norman 
Guest, J. Alden 
Gordon, Peyton 
Gorman, Arthur P. 



(jrayson, Wm. W. 
Grithths, George 
Giesy, S. Herbert 
Garthe, Louis 
Hill, John 
Hagner, Frank 
Hale, Chandler 
Hay, Edwin B. , Jr. 
Hoehling, A. A., Jr. 
Harban, L. L. 
Hine, Oliver C. 
Harmer, J. B. 
Howe, C. E. 
Hayden, James H. 
Harban, Walter S. 
Hamilton, George 
Holmes, Benj. W. 
Huxford, W. P. 
Hyde, Thos., Jr. 
Hague, Arnold 
Harber, Giles B. 
Harlow, C. H. 
Hellen, Benjamin 
Hopkins, James H. 
Hoy, James 
Hart, Frank W. 
Hoover, John B. 
Howe, James C. 
Joyce, R. E. 
Johnston, James M. 
Johnston, Robert D. 
Johnston, R. LeGrand 
Johnston, W. W. 
Johnson, Ralph 
Johnson, Richard A. 
Johnson, Paul E. 
Jones, Frank H. 
Jones, George A. 
Keen, George T. 
King, Harry 
Kimball, W. W. 
Knut, S. P. 
Keller, Thos. T. 
Kelley, Murray F. 
Kirby, Morris 
Lowndes, Lloyd, Jr. 
Lasky, John E. 
Lipscomb, Lisle S. 
Legare, A. B. 
Lee, Arthur 
Lee, Blair 
Leech, J. Frederick 
Legare, Hugh S. 
Lieber, Francis 
Lockett, James W. 
Lowery, Woodbury 
Lowndes, James 
Levey, Fred. H. 
Luenssen, Frank 
Lowndes, Chas. T. 
Loving, Frank H. 
Martin, Harrie B. 
Messenger, N. O. 
Muir, Chas. S. 
Mauro, Philip 
Mearns, W. A. 
Murray, T. M. 
Moore, Clarence 
Mott, L. U. 



Mills, George A. H. 
Maddox, Samuel 
Mosher, Theodore 
Magruder, G. Lloyd 
Marmion, W. V. 
Mason, T. B. M. 
McDowell, J. Harvey 
Mark, H. LeRoy 
Michler, A. K. 
Munn, Charles A. 
Muir, John G. 
Munger, Dudley B. 
Mosher, Lee 
MacLeod, Donald B. 
McClurg, W. A. 
McKenney, Wm. A. 
McKenney, Frederick D. 
McCurdy, A. W. 
McPherson, Wm. L. 
McDonald, H. B. 
McKee, David R. 
McKinney, Guy B. 
McLanahan, George W. 
McCammon, Ormsby 
Norris, James L., Jr. 
Norwood, J. A. R. 
Norwood, J. L. 
Newman, Edwin A. 
Nixon, W. W. 
Neill, Thomas W. 
Nicholson, R. F. 
Newcomer, Carl S. 
O'Donnell, John C. 
O'Farrell, Patrick H. 
O'Laughlin, Jas. P. 
O'Brien, E. C. 
O'Connell, Fred. C. 
Owen, F. D. 
Parker, Andrew 
Parks. Fred. R. 
Paret, J. F. 
Peebles, George E. 
Perkins, Bishop C. 
Perrin, Clifford 
Perry, R. Ross, Jr. 
Pomeroy, N. Willis 
Price, J. Clarence 
Perry, Howard 
Pinneo, J. Arthur 
Quackenbush, Earle C. 
Quantrell, Thos. C. 
Reed, H, W. 
Roman, D. F. O. 
Reeside, Howard W. 
Raymond, F. K. 
Ritter, E. P. V. 
Rapley, A. E. 
Rapley, W. H. 
Richey, S. O. 
Rosse, Irving'C. 
Rudy, Wm. D. 
Saks, Isadore 
Simpson, J. C. 
Stancliffc. Henry T. 
Snyder, Arthur A. 
Smith, Richard 
Smith, J. Speed, Jr. 
Small, J. H.. Jr. 
Stickncy, RolK-rt H. 



OJ-I-ICfAf. PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CF.R h.MONIhS. 25 



NA/ASHIINGTOISI, D. C 

^ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF.^ 

WITHIN FIVE minutes' WALK OF THE 

EXECUTIVE MANSION, TREASURY, STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENTS 



JOHN T. DEVIJME. 



THE RALEIGH ... 



European Plan 



ENTIRE CONSTRUCTION 
ABSOLUTELY FIRE=PROOF 



PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, 

Corner 12th Street, 

J> WASHINGTON, D. C. 

T. J. TALTY, Manager. 










B 



tL 7 J>-o. 



I Vashingtor 




Frovider^jdavir^gs^ife 



^^ssarar^ce^GGielq 



OF" NEIW YORK. 

Edward W. ScottF^esident. 

SuccEssruu A&ents.anoOentlCmen Seek.ncx Rcmuner^tive Business Connect, ons. 

MAV Apply to the HeaO Of rrCE.OR any or ThC SoCiCTt's GCNERIVL AftENTS. 



25 OFFICIAL PROGRAM MF OF T//F INAUGURAL CLRFMOMFS. 



Members of Floor Committee — Continued. 



Schcutz, W. H. 
Shuster, VV. j\l., Jr. 
Sacket, Francis \V. 
Saville, J. II. 
Shepard, Robert F. 
Shaffer, James Albert 
Smith, James Francis 
Shaw, Melville J. 
Scott, Alex. 
Stewart, Douglas B. 
Stone, Ralph W. 
Stiles. H. C. C. 
Stulb, B. 
Slater, Samuel 
Smith, Harry B. 
Sunderland, E. M. 
Thorn, T. W. 
Titus. William W. 
Tows, C. Downing 
Train. C. J. 



Tucker, Cha.s. C. 
Tolson, M. A. 
Thompson, W. S., Jr. 
Teel, W. S. 
Thompson, S. C. 
Troupe, C. F. 
Trimble, Joseph W. 
Tottcn, Howe 
Tyssowski, A. Z. 
Tucker, Dallas 
Vermilya, James H. 
Van Reypen, W. K. 
VanDyke, Harry W. 
Watson, Samuel J. 
Wilcox, Walter D. 
Weil. Nathan 
Whiting, Gu}' Fairfax 
Willard, Dwight D. 
Williams, Percy G. 
Wilson, John L. 



Wheatlcv, William 
Wolf, Adolph G. 
Wiggins, J. Vinson 
Wiltse, Franklin S. 
♦^Vylie, Horace 
Whitaker, L. D. 
Wallach, Robert 
Wescott, Horace H. 
Wiggins, J. V. 
Worthington, Chas. 
Warner, B. H., Jr. 
Wallach, Richard 
Way, Will H. 
Waters, T. S. 
Webb, H. Randall 
Willard, H. K. 
Wilkins, H. B , Jr 
Weller, Joseph I. 
Wiehle. Max C. J. 
Yarrow, H. C. 



Special Rates and Rules for Carriages for March 4th and 5th. 

The following special regulations govern the hire and disposition of carriages. 

Herdic cabs, Five Dollars each cab, to and from the Ball, $5 oo 

Coupes, Four Dollars each coupe, to and from the Ball, ... . . 4 oo 

Hansom cabs, Three Dollars each cab, to and from the Ball 3 00 

Conveyances! 2 horse), according to agreement, not exceeding Ten Dollars, 10 00 
No owner or driver of a vehicle, as before named, shall refuse to carry a passenger at 
the foregoing rates; nor shall he, when engaged, take up an additional passenger or pas- 
sengers without the consent of the person or persons who first engagea him. 

Any CO nplaint of illegal charges, giving the time, number of the vehicle or driver, 
and the address of the complainant, shall receive prompt attention from any policeman 
to whom it may be made. Every driver or owner of conveyances embraced in this order 
shall exhibit a piinted copy of the same in a conspicuous place in his vehicle. 

All vehicles to approach the Pension Building from Seventh Street — herdics, and one- 
horse coupes, entering E or F Street, following the south side if on F Street, to the 
entrance of the Pension Building, making their exit on Fourth Street to the south. All 
public carriages to approach the Building from Seventh Street, by way of G Street, fol- 
lowing north side of G Street to entrance of the building, and make their exit on Fourth 
Street to the north. The President's carriage, those of the Diplomatic Corps, and all 
private carriages to enter on F Street, follow north side, turn into Fifth Street, and deposit 
their passengers at Fifth Street entrance; then turn into G Street, and follow south side to 
Seventh Street, thence to space on F Street, between Seventh and Ninth Streets, also to 
Eighth Street below F, where they may park. Messengers will be provided at the Fifth 
Street entrance to call private carriages. 

All streets intersecting F and G Streets, between Seventh Street and the Pension 
Building, to be closed ; no vehicles to be permitted to travel west on either F or G Streets 
from P'ourth Streets, and none from E Street north on Fifth or Sixth Streets, and none from 
G or H Streets south on Fifth or Sixth. All vehicles intending to carry passengers away 
from the Pension Building to approach from Seventh Street. Owners of private carriages 
to be provided with cards (to be furnished prior to the Fourth of March) admitting them 
to the private Fifth Street entrance for carriages. 

The Committee have also arranged that persons holding a ticket for a' hired cab. 
herdic, or carriage will have the privilege, when leaving the Pension Office, of taking and 
occupying any one vehicle of the kind named upon their tickets, such persons not being 
required to await the arrival at the Pension Ofiice entrance of the particular vehicle in 
which they came tcj the building. All persons will be expected to make their exit through 
the same door that they enter, to prevent confusion and delay. Tickets for private car- 
riages will be issued by the Committee on Carriages, on Monday, Tuesday, and Wed- 
nesday (March ist, 2d, and 3d), at headquarters. Glover Building, 1419 F Street N.W. 
Tickets for hired conveyances will be issued by owners thereof, and the Liverymen's 
Association will form their own clearing-house for settlement of tickets among themselves. 
..* The last ticket furnished to owners of private carriages must be kept in sight by the 
driver in order that the carriage may be admitted to the proper line. 

When the owner of a carriage desires to call the same upon leaving the Pension Office, 
he will call out the number on small card, which is a duplicate of the number on driver's 
card, to a messenger who will be in wailing, and the number will at once be shown on a 
large screen placed on the roof at the southwest corner of the Pension Office. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 27 



PURIl. WhOI.F.SOMH, %h:FR/:SHlNC. 

Eminently adapted for ihc nsr of 
lliosc ichose nerves or stoiuaclis are 
disordered by excessive use of eoffee. 
and so economical that it requires 
only — 

OME UTTL£ ^0 
Tea,5poon- ^^^C- 

' ..^^ Two 

' ;# [AI^(3E(UP5 




ALL up-to-date) DIRKCTlONS-rsi- half usual quau- j SELL THESE 
GROCERS ) tity; soc water boils; stoop five miuutos. ) TEAS. 



2S OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



Ci «^ 0««o»-.D»00 Dooo ' 










BLEAC/lEPHAiRi 
RE(iE^H^ATEDTc ^ 






<^( 



-BLOW. 

T ^ ASH .„ 
Price "^^f 

bpepiaieKe/nfcdl/tf^Co -&f);^ 







g9£FIFT/lAVE,tero* 



1^: 



/"^/^S/ILEBrMLDMMIsrJS^mDmSERS mJiOl/OWHr M WORLD i 

Pd1en^Su5kinedib>'Ll5Courisdnclproaounce§ anseful ani j, 
meriiorious ii-!Veiit|oi-i'7\l)5ola'lel^.K(im-!les5 R,e[u5edll o4her>A 4 



"o.. » »o^>0i003ocoo» * o«.»oc/ooa0.o.o«.v.''.''»Vl«oo4?«i''-?^°«'":*^ '""'"''"'''' ""'- 




BRONZE STATUE ON NEWEL POST OF GRAND STAIRWAY. (LEFT.) 
NEW BUILDING FOR LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 



THE BALL. — Continued. 

General Management. 

The Executive Committee will occupy rooms at the northwest corner of the building, 
second floor. This room will be connected by electric signals with the entrances to the 
building; also by telephone with the principal rooms. The Chairman. Charles J. Bell, and 
in his absence the Secretaries of the Committee, Messrs. Fred. Brackett and Geo. H. 
Walker, will have authority, and should be called upon to settle any dispute that may 
arise as to admission to the building or to any part thereof, and to determine any question 
pertaining to the management, except such matters as are under the control of the 
chairmen of the various sub-committees. All matters connected with the Dancing or 
Promenade will be under the control of Mr. Edward McCauley, and those pertaining to the 
comfort of guests under the eontrol uf James E. Bell. The recei)tion of the President and 
other guests will be under the eontr<»l of Major-tieneral Nelson A Miles. 



30 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

MARVELOUS ELECTRIC EFFECTS. 

A perusal of this description, complete as it is, will give but a faint idea of the beauty 
of the building when the ball begins, because words cannot convey even an impression of 
what the scene will be when here, there, and everywhere, from grottoes and recesses, 
peeping out from the clusters of growing acacias, and gleaming among the hearts of a 
htindred beautiful flowers, nestled among palms, and clinging like diamonds and rubies to 
plaques and wreaths, will be thousands of electric lights in tiny globes of every conceiv- 
able color and tint, and all arranged with an artistic sense of their harmony with their 
surroundings. 



MRS. McKINLEY'S INAUGURAL GOWN. 

It is a brocade of silver and white, the combination producing a sort of gray color. 
It will be lined with pale blue satin. 

The gown is to be made rather plain. The corsage will have a fluflfy fichu of point 
d'Alencjon. Though the neck will be made high with soft laces, yet it will have the 
decollete effect. The sleeves will be long and finished with a full frill of lace. 

The skirt with its stately train is to have several panels of handsome brocade. The 
idea is to have the gown not elaborate and at the same time rich in effect. 

This is one of eight gowns which Mrs. McKinley has had made for official occasions. 

With this gorgeous gown Mrs. McKinley will wear a number of diamonds to fasten 
the lace, the handsomest being a diamond star and sunburst of unusual brilliancy. She 
will also wear exquisite side combs. 

The fan to be carried for this occasion is of the small empire shape, of lace, the same 
design as that on the gown, exquisitely embroidered in pearls. 

Mrs. McKinley's favorite color is blue, as is shown by the number of blue gowns in 
her wardrobe, and it is a color which she has worn from her girlhood. A green cloth gown 
was one suggested by Mr. McKinley, and one which, next to the inaugiiration gown, he 
took a special interest in. 




csAA^acKrcitxr'CfC/cic^ic^crr^'^cfcrrj'.^C'... '.7'Crc'v:rc«c:R7CTCfa£/'C^'^ 



QATnnniVT ''"'*s the present with the past, for, 
Ol/^l/l/l/li 1 while it is a product of tnodern 
times, its name datesliaek to the days of Ancient (J reeoe. 
It is derived from the Greek words "SOZO,"— to pre- 
serve, and "ODONTES,"— the teeth. 

A sample of Ii<iiiiil Si.zoilont liymail, piox idiil you lueutioii this 
publication imd mikI ;i<-. for posta^'e. .Viliiriss 
HALL A RUCKEL, New YorkCity, pi-oprU'tors. 



11 



President-elect McKinley's instructions in regard to his inauguration suits are that 
licy lie made loose about the arms, so that he may not become fatigued by handshaking. 



32 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

DE POTTER'S FIRST-CLASS EXCURSIONS san in may. june and july. for 

GIBRALTAR, ITALY, SWITZERLAND, ^IIHAMP NORWAY, NORTH CAPE, RUSSIA, 

GERMANY, AUSTRIA, FRANCE tllUIIUfc ^'"""®'' '^'■"' ^"'^^"''^^ ^"'- ^^'• 

Perfected Itineraries. ^p II ^W I I ^^ ^^ Unequaled Arrangements. 

Superior Leadership. ^B^^ ■ I \m I I^B Established 1879. 

Old World Guide, illustrated, free. Also, Tours to the Mediterranean, Orient, Japan, and Around the 
World. Steamship and Circular Railway Tickets. Letters of Credit, Drafts, Money Exchanged. 

A. DE: potter, IA66 Broadwsy, ISlew York. 



VERMONT'S FIRST PARTICIPATION IN A PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION. 

Vermont will be represented in the Inaugural Parade by Governor Josiah Grout and 
staff and three companies of the National Guard. The Governor will ride a milk white 
horse, and the members of the staff will be mounted on black steeds. The State militia 
will occupy a train of eight Wagner sleeping cars, which have generously been provided 
for the Washington trip through the courtesy of Dr. W. Seward Webb, President of the 
Wagner Car Company. The troops have been assigned a track in the Twelfth Street 
Yard of the Pennsylvania Railroad, on Maryland Avenue. The commands consist of 
Company M, of Burlington; Company A, of Bennington ; and Company I, of Brattleboro. 
The mili'tia will be under the command of Col. George H. Bond, of the First Regiment, 
and will march to the music of a regimental band. The "Green Mountain Boys" will 
wear sprigs of evergreen, and are assured of a warm reception here. Vermont has never 
before had a military contingent in an inaugural parade, and it is greatly to her credit 
that she proposes to send three crack companies of the National Guard to Washington on 
this occasion. 

Gov. Grout and staff, Lieut. Gov. N. W. Fisk, and many prominent citizens of the 
State, will have rooms at the Arlington Hotel. Vermont headquarters will be established 
in Parlor A on Friday, February 26. 

The Vermont McKinley Club, of which Senator Redfield Proctor is President, will 
have its headquarters at the Arlington. Secretary C. S. Forbes has been in AVashington 
this week securing accommodations for members of the club and other visiting 
Vermonters. 

The Vermonters will occupy the reviewing stand now in course of erection in front of 
the new post-office building, between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. The stand will have 
500 chairs, and is to be handsomely decorated. All natives of the State resident in 
Washington are expected to occupv this stand. Tickets can be had upon application to 
Col. M. M. Parker, 141 8 F Street, Northwest, or Mr. Henry A. Willard, 1416 F Street, 
Northwest. 

Senator and Mrs. Redfield Proctor will tender a reception to all visiting and resident 
Vermonters at their residence, 1535 L Street, Northwest, on Wednesday evening, March 
3, from 8 to II o'clock. There will be no special invitations issued, as a general invitation 
is extended to all Vermonters in Washington. The reception will be informal. A beauti- 
ful gold metal badge has been made for the Vermonters, consisting of the State seal in 
relief on a medallion suspended from a gold bar bearing the word "Vermont." A dark 
green ribbon depends therefrom with the inscription in gilt letters, " McKinley Inaugural, 
1897." The interests of the Vermont party attending the Inauguration are being well 
looked after by Senator Proctor, Col. M. M. Parker, and Mr. Henry A. Willard. 

ASSIGNMENTS AT HOTELS AND DEPOTS. 

At the meeting last evening of the Inaugural Committee on Public Order, the sub- 
committee appointed to consider the matter of detailing members of the Committee to 
duty at railroad depots and hotels during the Inauguration submitted its report. 

They recommended that on March i and 2, from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m., two members 
should be on duty at each of the two railroad depots and one member at each of the 
following hotels: National, Metropolitan, Willard's, Ebbitt, Riggs, Regent, Congressional, 
St. James, and Howard. On March 3 the sub-committee recommended that two men be 
kept on duty at each depot, and one at each hotel from 8 a.m. to 12 midnight. On March 
4 two men are to be kept on duty at each depot, between the hours mentioned, and one 
man at each hotel between 7 p.m. and 12 midnight. 

For the parade the Committee proposes to subdivide the avenue from the Peace 
Monument to Seventeenth Street into seven divisions, with five members in each division. 
At the East Capitol stand four members are to be assigned, and four others between 
this stand and the Peace Monument. 

Members of the Committee have been assigned to duty at the various points to be 
covered, the committee being sufficiently large so that it will not be necessary for any 
members to remain on duty longer than two hours at a time, except during the parade. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 33 



Tapestry Paintings. 



ifeife 




2,000 Tapestry paintings to choose from. Thirty- 
eiglit artists employed, including gold medalists 
of the Paris Salon. 



Wall Papers Given Away. 

Fine Satin, French or Leather Papers, 10 cents 
per roll ; former price, $ 1 .50. Have drapery 
to match. State color and for what rooms. 
Will send Sample Book if you will pay 
expressage. 



Special Draperies 



to match. Venetian, Roman, Dresden, Marie 
Antoinette, Delft, Russian, Grecian and 
Oriental, 



Tapestry Materials. 



We manufacture tapestry materials. Superior to foreign goods, and half the price. 
Book of samples, 10 cents. Send $1.50 for trial order, for two yards of 
50-INCH No. 6 goods, worth $3.00. 

Decorations. 

Write for color schemes, designs, estimates. Artists sent to all parts of the world 
to do every sort of decorating and painting. We are educating the country to 
color-harmony. Relief; stained glass ; wallpaper; carpets; furniture, draperies, etc. 
Pupils taught. Send $25.00 for a color scheme to decorate your home 

Schools. 

Six 3-hour tapestry painting, cnina or miniature lessons, in studio, $5.00. Com- 
plete written instructions by mail, $1.00. Tapestry paintings rented; full-size 
drawings, paints, brushes, etc., supplied. Nowhere — Paris not excepted — are such 
advantages offered pupils. New catalogue of 125 studies, 25 cents. Send $1.00 for 

COMPLETE INSTRUCTIONS IN TAPESTRY PAINTING AND COMPENDIUM OF 140 STUDIES. 

The Goddess of Atvatabar. 



A trip to the Interior World. 
318 octavo pages, 44 illustrations. 
50 cents. 



' Jules Verne in his happiest days outdone." 
Price, $2.00, postage prepaid. Paper covers. 



Manual of Art Decorations. 

The Art book of the century. 200 royal quarto pages. 50 superb full-page illus- 
trations ( 1 1 colored) of modern home interiors. Send $2.00 for this $50.00 
Art book. 

JOHN F. DOUTHITT, 

American Tapestry and Decorative Company, 



286 FIFTH AVENUE (near 30th Street), 



NEW YORK. 



34 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



PROMENADE CONCERTS, MARCH 5th AND 6th. 



Doors of Pension Building will be opened one hour before each Promenade Concert. 
Price for each Concert, 50 cents. No series tickets for sale. Tickets for sale at Pension 
Building and all of the principal Hotels. 




STEINWAY & SONS' PIANO USED. 

VICTOR HERBERT'S 22° REGIMENT BAND, 

N. G. S. N. Y. 

"The Band" unanimously selected by the National Executive Committee for the 
Inaugural Ceremonies of President McKinley. 

Direction: .... JOHN MAHNKEN. 

Permanent Address, Room 23, Steinway Hall, 109 East 14th St., New York. 



IN HONOR OF THE ARMY. 

Friday Morning, J J o*cIock, March 5th — Grand Concert by Victor Herbert's Twenty-second 
Regiment Band, N. G. S. N. Y. (late Gilmore's famous Band). 

PROGRAMME. 

1. Overture — Raymond, Thomas 

2. Spring Serenade, Lacombe 

3. Grand Finale — From Aida, Verdi 

4. Trombone Solo — The Lost Chord, Sullivan 

Mr. Ernest H. Clarke. 

5. a. Seguedille, ^ 

b. Havanaise, S Spanish Ballet Suite 1 )esormes 

c. Bolero de Cadiz, ) 

6. Sextette — From Lucia, Donizetti 

7. a. Passing the Cotton Fields, Clarke 

b. Dance Americaine Lax 

8. Starlight Waltz — From Wizard of the Nile, Victor Herbert 



EjSTERBROOK'g PENS ARE! THE BEST. 





iifWUi^ ii ii' ||J^r Sin ' 

"III rrr ! r-^ rr ? ^ ' • 





NEW CITY POST OFFICE BUILDING. 

PROMENADE CONCERT-ContinuecL 
IN HONOR OF THE NAVY. 
Friday Afternoon, 2 o'clock, March 5th— Grand Concert by Victor Herbert's Twenty-second 
Regiment Band, N. G. S. N. Y. (late Gilmore's famous Band). 

^ PROGRAMME. 

1. Overture — Tubel, 117 , 

2. a. Babillage. . ' • • Weber 

d. Intermezzo— Naila, ..'.'.'.'.['[ Delibes 

3- Entree of Knights and Finale— FromLohengrin, Wapnrr 

4. Concert WALTz-Artisfs Life, . Str iiiss 

5. Selection— From Prince Ananias, ... Victor Hcrb.^rt 

6. Cornet Solo- Whirlwind Polka. ■..'.'.■. . . ILirtmami 

» D HI ^ ^''■- H. L. Clarke. 

7- Ballet Music— From the Prophet Meyerbeer 

8. Spanish SERENADE-Lolita, ... fan Jev 

9. March— Pride of the Nation '.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. E. H. Droop 

^STERBROOK'S PENS ARE THE BEST. -.^-^. r^ — «ook«. 



36 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

PROMENADE CONCERT- Continued. 

IN HONOR OF THE GOVERNORS OF THE STATES OF THE UNION. 

Friday Evening, 8 o'clock, March 5th — Grand Concert by Victor Herbert's Twenty-second 
Regiment Band, N. G. S. N. Y. (late Gilmore's famous Band). 

rUOGRAMME. 

I Grand March— McKinley Inauguration Victor Herbert 

(Written expressly for the Presidential Inaui^uration of 1897.) 

2. OvF-RTTRE — William Tell, Rossini 

3. Cornet Solo — Fantaisie Brillante Arban 

Mr. H. L. Clarke. 

4. Second Hungarian Rhapsody, Liszt 

5. Selection — From Falka, Chassaigne 

6. Grand American Fantaisie, Victor Herbert 

Airs introduced : 

Hail Columbia; Suwanee River; Army Signals; The Girl I Left 
Behind Me ; Dixie ; Red, White and Blue, and the Star Spangled 
Banner. 

7. Waltz— Roses from the South, Strauss 

S. March — Washington Post Sousa 

9. Concer r Waltz — The Grenadiers, Waldtcufel 

10. March — The Gold Bug . Victor Herbert 



IN HONOR OF THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE 

UNITED STATES. 

Saturday Afternoon, 2 o'clock, March 6th— Grand Concert by Victor Herbert's Twenty- 
second Regiment Band, N. G. S. N. Y. (late Gilmore's famous Band\ 

PROGRAMME. 

1. March— The American Girl, . . Victor Herbert 

2. Overture — Robespierre Litolff 

3. Funeral March of a Marionette, Gounod 

4. Selection — From Robin Hood De Koven 

5. Piccolo Solo— Air Varie, Norrito 

Signer S. De Carlo. 

6. Scene and Quartette — From Rigoletto, Verdi 

7. Reminiscences ok Ireland, Godfrey 

Introducing: 

The Minstrel Boy; Molly Bawn ; The Legacy; Teddy O'Rourke, 
St. Patrick's Day; Let Erin Remember; My Lodging is on the Cold 
Ground ; Peggy Bawn ; St. Patrick was a Gentleman ; Garry Owen ; 
The Last Rose of Summer; Paddy Flaherty; The Rocky Road to , 

Dublin; ending with The Harp that Once Thro' Tara's Halls. 

8. Torchlight March, Meyerbeer 

ESTERBROOK'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 




OFFICIAL PROG RAM IMF OF TUF INAUGURAL CFREMONIFS. 37 



Knickerbocker Crust Company, 



234 Fifth Avenue, cor. 27th Street. 
CARIXAL, 



Branch Office, dd Broadway, N. Y. 
$1,000,000. 



DESIGNATED LEGAL DEPOSITORY. 

INTEREST allowed on time deposits. Deposits received subject to CHECKS ON DEMAND, which 
pass through the Clearing House like those upon any city hank. 

— Safe Deposit Boxes to Rent in Tire and Burglar Proof Uaults. — 

Acts as Executor, Administrator, Guardian, Receiver, Registrar. Transfer and Financial Agent, and 
accepts other Trusts in conformity with the Law of any State, or of the United States. 

Special Department with Special Facilities for Ladies. Business and Personal Accounts Solicited. 

ROBERT MACLAY, Prest.; CHARLES T. BARNEY, Vice-Prest.; JOSEPH T. BROWN, 2d Vice-Prest. 

-^^^^ DIRECTORS : -^^^-^ 



Joseph S. Auerbach 
Harry B. HoUins. 
Jacob Hays. 
Charles T. Barney. 
A. Poster Higgins. 
Charles R. Flir.t. 

FRED'K L. ELDRIDGE, Secretary. 



Henry W. T. Mali. 
Andrew H. Sands. 
James H. Breslin. 
Gen. Geo J. Magee. 
I. Townsend Burden. 



E. V. I.oew. 
Henry F. Dimock. 
John P. Townsend. 
Charles F. Watson. 
Frederick G. Bourne. 



Robert Maclay. 
C. Lawrence Perkins. 
Alfred L. White. 
Amzi L. Barber. 
Charles T. Cook. 



J. HENRY TOWNSEND, Ass't Sec'y 



HARVEY FISK & SONS, 



UNITED STATES BONDS 



And other desirable Investment Securities, 

24 NASSAU STREET, .♦. NEW YORK CITY. 



ESTABLISHED 1876. 



J. B. WOOLLEY, AGT., 

Irapcirter Whole.sale and Retail 
Dealer ju 

Japanese, Chinese, Curkisb and 
India 6ood$, 

249 FIFTH AVENUE, 

One (low l«l()W 28th street. HCW VOfR. 



)) 



The ''Benedict. 

The Perfect 

Collar 
Button. 

FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 

ENOS RICHARDSON iSc CO., 

23 Maiden Lane, New York, 
Sole Maaufacturers. 





C. WERNICKE, 

10 & 12 West 28th Street, 

Bet. Broadway and Fifth Ave., NEW YORK. 

Branch, 314 Fifth Avenue, 

Bet. The Waldorf and Holland House. 



Charles Frazier & Co* 
« Bankers « 

93 Nassau Street, 

New York Qty. 



38 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



PROMENADE CONCERT— Continued. 

IN HONOR OF VISITING GUESTS. 
Saturday Evening, March 6th, at 8 o'clock. 

CONCK.KT PROCKAMMK NO. 5. 

1. Grand March — From Tannhiiuser Wagner 

2. a. Narcissus Nevin 

b. Spanish Dance Moszkowsk}- 

3. Trio FOR Cornets — "Polka Brillante," Victor Herbert 

Written expressly for the Three Solitaires, Messrs. Clarke, Ha(;kr and Schmidt. 

4. Scenes Neapolitaines, Massenet 

I. Allegro — "LaDanse." 

II. Lent et Religieux — "La Procession et I'lmprovisateur." 

III. Allegro — "La Fete." 

Note.— Scenes Characteristic. Tarantella (Italian National Dance) ending 
abruptly— tolling? of bells and the strains of an old chant— sudden 
change— a prestidigitateur appears ind performs his various tricks, 
the composer illustrating them by charming variations on an Italian 
folksong. In the Finale (one of the most brilliant pieces of the 
modern French School) Massenet, the Makart of Sounds, gives a 
splendid and vivid portrayal of gay life in Italy. 

5. Festival Choruses — With Band Accompaniment. The Grand Inaugural Chorus, 500 

Voices, under the personal direction of Prof. Percy Foster. 
Soldiers' Chorus, from Faust. 
The American Anthem. 
Hail, Bright Abode ! 
March and Chorus, from Tannhauser. 

6. Selection — From the Comic Opera, The Wizard of the Nile, . . Victor Herbert 




VICTOR HERBERT. 



ElSTERBROOK'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



39 



SUSTW. NOACK.J 



GEO A WILUAMSOH 



1l* Issawaissi ^mm^ fc 








tii-'^vtHt'iJ^ia-t': f- •..^^«»^:v•••.•r. ■<.- . (its.; . i "J-: 



NEW BUILDING FOR THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 



^^^ 



^LECTRO-IJGHT ^^^ 







All the half-tone 
Illustrations for 
this Programme, 

'* Beautiful 
Washington/* 

(^ and the guide to 
the new building 

%LS'n'^ for the ^ 

*^ Library of 
Congress/' 

i''^^'*^'' i ^ ^'^^^^ made by the 

■0 1^ '^m Electro-Light 



WKf^'J^'r '■"'■" "f' >'W^^ Engraving 




■^•^?; 



jr* 



The Ulman Goldsborough Co. 




41 SOUTH G/\y STREET, 

NEW YORK OFFICE: ,— , _ n >r 

er BE>*i^£/? STREET. BALTIMORE MD. 

For sale by all the leading Clubs, Hotels and Grocers throughout the United States. 




UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE. 



W. T. WOODS, 

President. 



D. B. HALSTEAD, 

Vice-President. 



C. E. W. CHAMBERS, 

Secretary. 



^PLATF GLASS 

/nsum/ice Company 

OF A/EW YOfin. 

Cas/i Cap/taJ Inrorporafed 

S250MO. iS82, 

(A Stock Company.^ 



Largest Assets, Largest Income, and Largest Reserve of any Plate Glass 
Insurance Company in the World. 



42 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



REPRESENTATIVE HOTELS OF NEW YORK. 







^,~_-pr _TZS' r^^ -= .^,.- j,^,,.,^!.',,,^. 










FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL, Madison Square, NEW YORK. 



^r-i 



Broadway and 29tli Street, 
HEW YORK. 



^ TURTEVANT HOUSE ^ 

HENRY J. BANG, Proprietor. 

r. -ti, u- .J *o CA ,,«,^»„ o«^ „,^„ror^c ^ Most Central iH thc citv ; Hcaf all elcvatcd foads. 

Rooms with board. $2.50 per day and upwards. ^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ jj^^^^ principal places of amusement, 

Rooms without board. $1.00 per day and upwards. ^ business centres and the large retail stores. 

^ TT . ^ Broadway Cable Cars pass the door, transferring 
bteam Meat. 1^ to all parts of thecity 




PLAZA HOTEL. 

Filth .Avenuf, 55th and 54th Streets, New York. Highest Class, Overlooking: Central Park, 
AbsoUitLly Fireproof, American and European Plans. • « • F. A. HAMMONP. 



$1,500.00 IN GOLD 

Given away RREE as RRIZES. 

Send Postal for P.Trtirii1.Tr<;. 

DUNCAN & KELLER,^!* 156 Fifth Ave., New York City. 




UNITED STATES POST OFFICE. 



... Saves Life and Suffering ... 

THE « GEYSER " HOT APPLIANCE 



( The continuous hot water bag. ) 



NO MORE building fires at midnight! 
NO MORE wringing out wet cloths 
NO MORE cold, clammy, painful 

poultices [ 
NO MORE disturbing or chilling a 

sick person in renewing hot 

applications ! 




Send for Illustrated 

Descriptive Circular. 



The Geyser Hot Appliance j* 

Automatically supplies heat to any degree, uni- 
form or gradually increasing, to any part of the 
body, producing results never be.'ore attained. 
Gives immediate relief in the following cases, 
where common hot water bags are utterly use- 
less, and where all former methods have failed, 
viz.: Pneumonia, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, all 
Inflammatory diseases, or where heat [wet or 
dry] is required. 

Combines Luxury and Comfort with a feeling 
of Security, especially at night. 



A few of the many Hospitals and Sanitariums where the Appliance is being used; 



Clifton Springs Sanitarium, Clifton Springs, N. Y. 
Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital, Boston, Mass 
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass. 
Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital, New York. 
Jackson Sanitarium, Dansville, N. Y. 
Dr. Strong's Sanitarium, Saratoga, N. Y. 
Danvers Lunatic Hospital, Danvers, N. Y. 
St. Vincent's Hospital, New York. 
New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York. 



Steuben Sanitarium. New York State. 

Battle Creek Sanitarium, Michigan. 

St., Peter's Hospital, lirooklyn, N. Y. 

Brooklyn Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Brooklyn Homeopathic Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

St. Luke's Hospital, New York. 

New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn. 

American Hospital, .Mc.\ico. 

Flower Hospital, Boston, Mass. 



THE HOT APPLIANCE COMPANY, 



26 Cortlandt Street, 



CHAS. W. SPURR, Jr.. 
Manager. 



New York. 



44 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



R. HOE & CO.'S STEAM LITHOGRAPHIC PRESS. 




New York, February 5th, 1897. 
Gentlemen : 

The cover of this Official Programme was printed on your lithographic presses. We 
have no other make in our office, and some have been in constant daily use for eighteen 
years, are now giving perfect register, and in this period have cost us less than one doliar 
(3 1. 00) per year for repairs — an average continued since 1891, when we made a similar 
statement to you in a letter about the same lithographic presses. 

Yours very truly, 
Messrs. R. Hoe & Co., THE BRETT LITHOGRAPHING CO. 

504 Grand Street, New York City. 



R. HOE & CO. 



Manufacture and Supply 



Printing Presses of Every Description^ 

Also, Printers^ and Lithographers^ Materials^ 



Including : 



Wrought-Iron Chases, 

Stereotype Blocks, 

Galleys, 

Cabinets and Stands, 

Case Racks, 

Moleskin, Molleton and Flannel for Rollers. 

Roller Skins. 

Rubber and Cloth Blanketing, 

Tape, 

Card and Paper Cutters, 

Linotype Metal Furnaces, 



Saw Tables, 

Labor-Saving Furniture, 

Lead and Rule Cutters, 

Mitre Machines, 

Imposing Tables with Letter Boards, 

Composition Kettles, 

Proof Presses, 

Card and Ticket Presses, 

Brass Rules and Dashes, 

Composing Sticks, 

Counters, 



And Electrotyping and Stereotyping Machinery, Hydraulic Presses 
and Pumps, Copying Presses, 



Patent ChiseI=Tooth 

and 




Solid Circular Saws, 

Etc., Etc. 



No. 504 GRAND STREET, NEW YORK. 

Also, Mansfield Street, Borough Road, London, England. 




BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. 



THE ART INTERCHANGE. 

THE OLDEST, BEST, AND MOST PROGRESSIVE 
ART AND HOUSEHOLD MONTHLY MAGAZINE. 

Indispensable to Art Workers, and an invaluable guide in all Branches of Home Decoration. 

NO HOME 

COMPLETE 

WITHOUT IT. 

Each number is beautifully 
illustrated and accompanied by 
exquisite facsimiles of oil and 
water-color paintings. 35c. per 
copy at all dealers'. Yearly Sub- 
scription, $4 00. Trial, three 
months, $1.00. 

^typ^clitl f\^fckf Every one remitting NOW $4.00 for one year's subscription will receive FREE, 
jyCK^ldl V/IICr. as a premium, 6 attractive 1896 Nos. of THE ART INTERCHANGE, together 
with 12 superb colored pictures and 12 design supplements. This generous offer includes the beautiful 
companion pictures, Pansies and Violets, eacli Sx^is in. in size. Or you may remit $1.00 NOW for this 
Special Offer, with privilege of sending $3.00 later for a full year's subscription. 

Or for $2.00 vou will receive THE ART INTERCHANGE for six months (January to June, i8q7'>, and 
will get in addition FREE the Oct., Nov., and Dec, i8q6, numbers, thus getting nine months for $2.00. 
These offers are so liberal that you must subscribe at once or you will be too late. 

FOR A LIMITED TIME we will send for only 25 cents to any one mentioning this Programme a 
late number of THE ART INTER- _ .-^^ ^,^ •vH-'/.A. rf*,, ^-n 

CHANGE, and the two superb color . ^^^ ~' ■ ■\^^'^::^jr^^^^'^^^^'' 

plates shown in this advertisement. <, ^ ,-f itNi~"^>j!^ -^^"^^Vts!.', *i'^»yKtt^\H"J''^ 




VIOLETS— Water-color. By Mary E. Hart. Size, 8x35 inches. 
Price, 50 cents, if sold singly. 



Our Color Plates are made by the 
Brett Lithographing Co., and no 
pains or expense are spared to make 
them perfect specimens of litho- 
graphic art. Send for a copy and 
be convinced of their superiority 
over all others. Illustrated Cata- 
logue and 1897 Prospectus free. 




PANSIES — Water-color. By Grace Barton Allen. Companion to 
Violets and Roses. Price, 50 cents, if sold singly. 



THE ART INTERCHANGE, 152 West 23d Street, New York. 



46 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

33d ANNUAL STATE/WENT 

. . OF THE . . 

TRAVELERS 

iisisuraimce: coivirany. 
Chartered 1863. (Stock.) Life and Accident Insurance. 



HARTFORD, CONN., JANUARY I, 1897. 

^PAID=UP CAPITAL, $1,000,000.00.^^- 

ASSEIXS. 

Real Estate $1,953,756.09 

Cash on hand and in Bank i,462fi33.26 

Loans on bind and mortgage, real estate . . 5,377,156.02 

Interest accrued but not due 203,121.89 

Loans on collateral security 714,150.00 

Loans on this Company's Policies 936, 342 . 3 1 

Deferred Life Premiums 291,935.47 

Premiums due and unreported on Life Policies 255,503.67 

State, county, and municipal bonds 3,361,078.92 

Railroad stocks and bonds 3,767, 171 .00 

Bunk stocks 1,084,966.00 

Miscellaneous stocks and bonds 1,489,370.00 

Total Assets $20,896,684. 63 

LIABILIXIES. 

Reserve, 4 per cent.. Life Department $15,561,585.00 

Reserve for Re-insurance. Accident Department 1,31 1,974.40 

Present value of Matured Installment Policies 354,570.00 

Special Reserve for Contingent Liabilities 286,651 .98 

Losses unadjusted and not due, and all other Liabilities 405,478.89 

Total Liabilities $l?,920,260.2r 



Surplus to Policy-holders $2,976,424. 36 

STA.TISTI^S TO ^/kTE. 

LIFE DEPARTHENT. 

Number Life Policies written 90,479 

Life Insurance in force $88,243,267 . 00 

New Life Insurance written in 1896 1 1,941,012.00 

Insurance issued under the Annuity Plan is entered at the commuted 
value thereof, as required by law. 

Returned to Policy-holders in 1896 1,228,077.90 

Returned to Policy-holders since 1864 1 1,914,765. 18 

ACCIDENT DEPARTHENT. 

Number of Accident Policies written 2,338,186 

Number Accident Claims paid in 1S96 14,163 

Whole number Accident Claims paid 292.379 

Returned to Policy-holders in 1896 $ 1 ,373,936.96 

Returned to Policy-holders since 1864 19,828,189.13 

Returned to Policy-holders in 1896 $2,602,014.86 

Returned to Policy-holders since 1864 31,742,954,31 



GEORGE ELLIS, Secretary. 
JOHN E. nORRIS, Ass't Sec'y. EDWARD V. PRESTON, Sup't of Agencies. 

J. B. LEWIS, n.D., Surgeon and Adjuster. SYLVESTER C. DUNHAM, Counsel. 

{i'ebruary 3, 1S97. 




THE WAR, STATE AND NAVY BUILDING. 




tU Invention 

of the ::: 

i9tb Century. 



no Weights, 
no Springs. 

Cbe micrometer 
Balance Scale C;o., 

257 Broadway, 

Send for Circulars. HCW Vork. :: 



PUBLIC BUILDING ILLUMINATION. 

The State, War, and Navy Department building will be handsomely decorated at 
Government expense, but the electric current for illumination must be paid for by the 
Inaugural authorities. There will be two powerful searchlights placed on top of the 
building, which will illuminate the Washington monument, the Capitol building, the 
White House, and other buildings within range, and an immense garrison flag, floated 
from the roof, will also be lighted up at intervals. 

Four garrison flags will be hung from the windows at the apex of the Washington 
monument, and the effect when the searchlights are thrown will be sublime. 

The Agricultural Department building and grounds will be decorated and illuminated, 
and the National Museum and vSmithsonian Institution and grounds also illuminated. The 
Bureau of Engraving and Printing will be beautifully decorated by the employes. The 
Treasury, Interior and Post Office'officials will decorate and illuminate their buildings, and 
the full power of gas and electricity in the Capitol building will be used the night of 
Marcb 4. 



48 OFFTCIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 




F/fflCTS mom ©LB CiOW iTE/' 



<.'**lt«*t <•*«■•»«,« 



THE ONLY PERSONS THAT BOTTLE OUR 

"OLD CROW RYE" 

Are Messrs. H. B. KIRK & CO., who have taken 
every barrel of RYE Whiskey made by us in the 
past twenty-four years. 

Wo a. ^mm^ ^ w>., 

Proprietors of "Old Crow" 
and Hermitage Distilleries, 
January 8, 1896. Frankfort, Ky. 

The genuine label is shown in accompanying cut. Like 
all meritorious articles, it is counterfeited right and 
left, bottles refilled, &c., &c. Therefore, caution is 
necessary in buying. SOLD EVERYWHERE. 

' n. p. KIRK ^ CO., 






69 FULTON ST., also BROADWAY & 27th ST., 

ISIEIW YORK. 



THE PLAN OF THE PARADE. 

The line of the parade has been definitely decided on. The formation will occupy 
about the same streets that it did four years ago. There will be a slight contraction of 
space on account of the non-participation of the Pennsylvania National Guard. The 
United States troops will form, as before, on First Street Northeast, facing the Capitol 
grounds, and the streets and avenues running east from the park will be devoted to the 
militia of the various States. The civic division will form on the streets and avenues 
north and south of the Capitol grounds. 

The line of march, as heretofore stated in the Evening Star, will be from the Capitol 
grounds out to B Street Northwest, thence to First, to Pennsylvania avenue, to Washington 
Circle, to K Street, to Mount Vernon Square, Ninth Street, where the parade will be dis- 
banded. There will be a gratifying innovation in the formation of the procession. 
Heretofore, inaugural parades have been led by the grand marshal and staif , and the 
marshal of the first division and his staff. This time a platoon of police mounted will 
lead, and the United States Marine Band will immediately follow at the re.il head of the 
procession. This arrangement is regarded as being a mark of distinguished honor for the 
band, and was made with that intention. 

ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT GOVERNMENT VOLUMES EVER ISSUED. 

The third volume of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents have been received 
by some of the members from the Public Printer, and it is very evident that this valuable 
set of books will extend to considerably more than the original four volumes contem- 
plated. The first volume contained the messages and the State papers of seven Presi- 
dential terms. The second volume was brought to a close at the end of four more terms, 
while the third volume includes the State papers only of Jackson's second term and of the 
administration of Martin Van Buren. 

Although none of the messages of the Presidents in the olden time were anything 
like as long as they now are, it is clearly seen how they have been gradually increasing 
in length from generation to generation. Besides, the veto messages of President Cleve- 
land alone will make one good-sized volume. Some of them, even on trivial subjects, 
have been long enough for an annual message. 

The first Presidential veto was written by George Washington, April 5, 1792, and 
although it disapproved of a most important act for an apportionment of Representatives 
among the several States, on the ground of unconstitutionality, yet the veto message 
contained only 150 words. 

"Just think," said one of the Republican members of the House, "of Grover Cleve- 

i giving his objections to a bill, on the ground of unconstitutionality, in 150 woTds!" 



land giving 




UNITED STATES TREASURY BUILDING. 



A 



On Sale Everywhere. 



S an effective remedy for coughs and throat irritations they are unequaled. Bicyclists endorse them 

as more acceptable and beneficial than chewing gum. 
Smokers and public speakers find them invaluable. 




One placed m the mouth at night when retiring will prevent that annoying dryness of the throat so 
prevalent with many, and insure a restful sleep. Thev leave no unpleasant taste when awakening. 

Taken freely, they act as a mild and effective laxative. They quicklv remove attacks of indigestion. 

Are better than all the so-called cough drops. If not on sale in your neighborhood, send 5 cents in 
postage stamps, and we will mail a package. 



/fMlcuUtA 



New York. 



Manufacturers of Chocolates and Confections. 




GENERAL NELSON A. MILES, CHAIRMAN RECEPTION COMMITTEE, INAUGURAL BALL 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 51 



RuiNART Brut 

CHAMPAGNE 



OLDEST 

CHAMPAGNE 

HOUSE 

IN 

THE WORLD 

FOUNDED A. D. 
1729 




RECEIVED 

THE HIGHEST 

AWARD 

FOR 

BRUT WINE 

AT THE 

WORLD'S FAIR 

CHICAGO 

1893 



Acknowledged by Connoisseurs 



^-fATO BB TnB\s^ 



Highest Grade Champagne imported. 



52 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



Representative Hotels and Business Houses of New York. 

i-«o~rE:i_ e:imi3i< 




HOTEL MANHATTAN 

EUROPEAN PLAN 

• HAWK a WETHERBEE 

AVAOI SON AVE N ue & 42"^ STRtrr 

NEW YORK 




_■ 5r., C'-_l'a;3L'S Ave., 

NEW YORK. 



I 



The Best People 

from everj'where, bent on 
business or pleasure, when 
in New York stop at 

THE ST, DENIS. 

The Cuisine and Comforts of the 
Hotel have become so well known 
that its name is now a household 
word in thousands of homes in 
this country and Europe. 
Central Location : 

Broadway and Eleventh Street^ 

Opposite Grace Church, 

NEW YORK. 




Bf^KTInlOLBL 



Proprietors, 






^€€/^'^aj/^^y^^^ 



Estndlished /&76. 






J;^.(/!:jyiu/^/'^ 



To on/ei onJij 
Si/if.s f 20"<'fo fSO^" 
Trrmsfrs S-j"-" (o S /Ot" 



%^s^M^'^/^ 




J. H. Small & Sons. 

Orchids, Roses, Violets, 
ARTISTIC FLORAL DECORATIONS, 



WASHINGTON, 



NEW YORK, 



14TH AND C STREETS '?^y 1153 BROADWAY. 

LONG DISTANCE AND LOCAL TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS. 

CABLE: ".J ASM ALL," N.Y. FORTRESS MONROE, VA. 

FLORAL DECORATORS FOR THE INAUGURAL BALLS OF 1893 AND I69T. 



54 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



Have YOU Seen II? 

The Blickensderfer No. 5 

The Little Machine with the Big Name and Bigger Record 



HERE IT IS — 



Costs only $35. 
Weighs only 6 lbs. 
Full Keyboard of 
84 Characters. 
Any Space 
Between Lines. 




Writing Always in 

Sight. 

No Ribbon Used. 

Interchangeable Type. 

Unexcelled Manifolder. 

Unvarying Alignment. 



GST DURABLE MACHINE MADE, and most reasonable in cost, because 
simplest in construction. From 1000 to 3000 parts in other keyboard 
machines. The Blickensderfer has only 200. A written guarantee covering every 
part of the machine for one year. What company will do more ? 

An ideal machine for the counting-room, the traveling man, and the home. 

Over 30 sold t o the U. S. Government within the last few weeks. 

Over 1000 sold to the Western Union Telegraph Co. within six months. 

Why pay $100 for a big, cumbersome machine, when you can get a portable 
little " Blick," which does all the work, and more, too, for only $35. 

General Agents in all States. 
Send for Descriptive Catalogue. 

The Blickensderfer Manufacturing Cgmpany, 

STAMFORD. CONN. 

All visitors to the Inauguration arc respectfully invited to 
call and examine this wonderful evolution in typewriters. 

TURNER & MOORE, General Southern Agents, 

National Union Building, 918 F Street, N. W., 

(Ground Fijoor) 

»m«<>re OfflM, D»lly Record BuUdlne. WASHINQTON. D. C. 




THE SOLDIERS' HOME. 



R. GERNSHEIMER, 



Manufacturer of the 
Celebrated 



** Presidential Bouquet/' 
'^Banquet/' 

**Amorosa/' 



and ^^ Telia" 



CLEAR 



HAVANA CIGARS, 

t04 Chambers St., 
NEW YORK. 



Tanner's Staff. 

From the New York Evening Sun. 

The staff of Gov. Tanner, of Illinois, have 
laid themselves out to dazzle the effete East 
on the occasion of President McKinley's 
inauguration. Their new uniforms, which 
will cost at least $500 apiece, are said to be 
so gorgeous that blue glasses will be abso- 
lutely necessary for all beholders. An 
enthusiastic tailor, in speaking of these togs, 
said: " Those trousers will fit in a manner 
to strike green envy into the souls of all 
common people who see them." Even the 
capes, to be worn in case of rain, are 
'' thmgs of beauty and great dignity," while 
the dress coat is " a thing to be imagined— 
not described." 

Bolen & Byrne's 



Imperial 

Malt^ 

Extract 



An American 
Preparation. 

Endorsed by the 

Medical Faculty, and 

used by leading 

Hospitals 

Better than the 
so-called Imported. 
Gives Strength, Tone. 
and Vigor 



BOLEN & BYRNE, 
415 to 423 E. 54th Street, New York. 



56 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



THE CELEBRATED 

SOHMER 

Heads the List of the 

Mighest=Grade Pianos 

AND 

Are the favorite of the Artists 
and the refined musical public. 

WAREROOMS: 

149-155 EAST 14th STREET, 
NEW YORK. 

CAUTION.— The buying public will 
please not confound the SOHMER 
Piano with one of a similarly sounding 
name of cheap grade. 
Our name spells — 

S-O-H-M-E-R 



THE VALUE OF A GOOD NAME 

goes on inereasiii}^ with years. Tetley'S 
Ceylon and India Teas have only been known 
on this side the Atlantic six years, but 
Joseph Tetley & Co. have two {.generations 
of record in London, and when they first 
introduced their Ceylon and India Teas on 
the market, the name of 

JOSEPH TETLEY & CO., 

with their assurance that their packets were 
guaranteed "absolutely pure" and "uni- 
form quality," established their merit. 




The teas are selected and blended by 
experts, and packed in the bonded ware- 
house, London, so that the freshness and 
flavor of the leaf are maintained. 

Prices, 50c., 70c., and Si-oo per pound. 
If your grocer cannot supply yon. send a card to 

Joseph Tetley & Co., 

13 and 15 White St., New York City. 



^ortl] Bfifisl7 at\d /X\^rcanfile InsurancG Go. 



OF UONDOfJ HflD EDIflBUt^GH 



EIstiabtlisHeci I809. 



OFFICE: Cor. Pine and William Streets, 



NEW YORK CITY. 



Dr. JAEGER'S SANITARY . . 
■*^ ... WOOLEN SYSTEM CO. 

W. H. McKNEW and | 

TYSSOWSKI BROS., ) "^''"^^^''^ ^^'^''- 

THE FASHIONABLE PERFUME. 




isnnmninsdnnTTTTTnK 



WencK 



OPERA BOUQUET, a delicate and lasting extract. 
Obtainable of all dealers In Fine Perfumery. 




UNITED STATES SIGNAL DUILDING. 



(» (* 4 <• i* ;* 



Jordan 
Whiskey 



i( IK i( 



Barrels 

and Cases* 



« «< l» «) 




A A A A A A 



Thomas 
& Son 
Company^ 

Louisville^ 
Kentucky* 

9 V ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 



58 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 





"AMORITA WINS.' 

AMORITA SMOKING MIXTURE- 

For Sale at all Leading Tobacconists. 

BUCHANAN & UYALk. MFRS., NEW YORK. 




ESTABLISHED 1848. 



OLD CLIFF 




WHISKEY. 



|. & T. EAGER COMPANY, 

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN 

WINES. BRANDIES. 

AND 

FINE WHISKEYS. 

No. 34 CLIFF ST., 

__^ NEW York. 



■m : 


1 ^i 


H 1 «: 




6o OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 




— -Mlatabl&as^ll as -- 

ABSOLUTELY PURE 

THE BRAUNSCHWEIGER MUM ME is made from roasted malt, by a process 
of natural fermentation, which produces a pleasant, highly nourishing malt 
extract, containing the smallest percentage of alcohol and the largest amount of extract 
of any liquid malt on the market. An effective Tonic, and, at the same time, a mild 
stimulant, it is tolerated by the weakest stomach, and is a substitute for solid food in 
cases of acute disease, and a valuable aid to digestion in all chronic conditions indi- 
cating malassimilation of food. Nursing mothers, convalescents,' and victims of 
insomnia or nervous disorders resulting from impaired digestion or overwork, will find 
that Braunschweiger Mumme taken with each meal will stimulate digestion, while 
taken before retiring will induce quiet, restful sleep. It preserves and strengthens the 
well and restores the sick. 

BOTTLED FOR SALE AND DELIVERED ANYWHERE BY 

The Long Island Bottling Company, 

280-284 Bergen Street, - Brooklyn, N. Y. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 6i 



Ra 



enovo 



Room 27, 
Benedict Building, 



... Manufacturing Co. 



171 ^roadway, New yorl<. 



Factory : 
Jersey City, N. J. 



Have you ever tried f^CflOVO ? 

Asl< \Jour Grocer for it. It comes in 
quart cans. If \Jour Grocer don't 
I<eep it, send to us direct. Price, 
25 cents per quart can. Use it once, 
j?ou will nev^r be without it. 

For Domestic Purposes it is Especially Effective, 

For cleaning Paint, Mirrors, Windows, Picture Frames, Marble Mantels 
or Table Tops, Bric-a-Brac, Plush Furniture, and the washing of 
Woolens, Blankets and Lace Curtains. 

For Kitchen Use it has no equal for cleaning Sinks, Oil Cloth, 
China, Glassware, Silverware, Tinware, Tables, Grease Stained Utensils, 
Wood Work or Floors. 

The use of Renovo on the shelves of Pantries and Closets effec- 
tually protects theni from the encroachment of Ants, Roaches or other 
vermin, which are such a pest to the average household. 

For Bath or Toilet use it is par excellence, cleansing the person 
as if by magic. As a Shampoo Lotion it has no equal. 

Sanitary Effect. When the Carpets, Paint and Furniture of 
rooms which have been occupied by invalids are renovated by the 
"Renovo Process," the disease germs are destroyed and the air 
is rendered pure and wholesome. 



Factory : 
Jersey City, N. J. 



J^^ovo Mfg. <2o. 



Agents Wanted 

Office: I7I Broadway, Room 27, New York City. 




CITY HALL. 



*4 



IN A NEW DRESS. 



ff 




OEAR6H 




FOR 

'97. 



Handsomely Embossed. 
Reflecting surfaces so protected that 



*\ Rigid Bracket — Cannot Jar Out. 



they cannot become smoked or ^ 



^ Fully protected by patents, which 



tarnished. 

19 Murray St., New York. 
J 7 North 7th St., Philadelphia. 
85-87 Pearl St., Boston. 



J' 



will be maintained. 



The Bridgeport Brass Co*^ 

Bridgeport, Conn. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 63 

/^^ "^ -^-^ -. ^ npHIS book is printed on paper 

^ ■ ' F- ,, „ ^ made by 

, 'iTTTf^- V^i*iionBros.&Co. 

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64 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

S. A. MacFarland, 

MANUFACTURER AND 

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For Portrait, Parlor, 
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rfZ/S MARBLE BUST OF PRESIDENT McKINLEY 
NOW BEING CUT FOR OHIO FRIENDS. 

EXAMPLES OF OUR WORK TO BE SEEN IN EVERY CITY OR 
CEMETERY OF NOTE IN THE U. S. 

New VorkOtfice: \\{ FIFTH AVENUG. 



INAUGURAL PARADE OF MARCH 4, J 897. 

HEADQUARTERS OP THE GRAND MARSHAL, 
General Orders I 1419 ^ Street Northwest, Washington, D. C.^ ^^ 

The following- are the orders for the organization, movement and dismissal of the Inaugural Parade : 
I.— The Escort to the President from the Executive Mansion to the Capitol will be the First Division of the 

Military Grand Division. 

The Escort to the President from the Capitol to the Executive Mansion at the conclusion of the Inaugural 

Ceremonies will be composed of one Military and one Civic Grand Divltion, aubdivided into Divisions and 

Brigades. 

U. C, Commanding; First Battalion, Major R. L. 
Meade, Commanding; Second Battalion, Major C. F. 
Williams, Commanding; Third Battalion, Capt. E. R. 

Robinson, Commanding; Battalion U. S. Seamen; 

U. S. N., Commanding; Staff; Battalion Light Artil- 
lery, Major James M. Lancaster, U. S. A., Command- 
ing ; Light Battery E, First Artillery, Captain AUyn 
Capron ; Light Battery D, Fifth Artillery, Capt. Frank 
Thorp ; Regiment U. S. Cavalry, Col. S. S. Summer, 
U. S. A., Commanding ; Staff, First Lieuts. Geo. H. 
Sands, Robt. L. Howze, U. S. A. 

Second Brigade — District of Columbia National 
Guard, Col. Cecil Clay, Commanding; Lieut.-Col. 
Theo. Mosher, Adjutant-General. Engineer Corps: 
Major Gilbert Thompson, Commanding. First Reg- 
iment, Infantry, Lieut.-Col. Clifford S. Walton, Com- 
manding, Lieut. Joseph W. Anderson, Adjutant; 
First Battalion, Major Burton M. Ross, Commanding, 
Second Battalion, Maj. Richard A. O'Brien, Com- 
manding. Third Battalion, Major Fred. T. Wilson, 
Commanding. Second Regiment Infantry: Lieut.- 
Col. M. Emmett Urell, Commanding ; Capt. James R. 
Mock, Adjutant; Fourth Battj^ion, Major Edward R. 
Campbell, Commanding; Fifth Battalion, Capt. Guy 
E. Jenkins, Commanding ; Sixth Battalion, Major 
George A. Bartlett, Commanding; First Separate 
Battalion, Major Fred. C. Revells, Commanding; 
Battery A, Light Artillery, Capt. Hel«e G. Forsberg ; 
First Separate Company (Cavalry), First Lieut. Chas. 
Beatty ; Ambulance Corps, First Lieut. Warren D. 
Foles ; Second Separate Company (Cycle), Captain S. 
H. Wiggin. High School Cadet Regiment of Infantry 
Col. Frank C. Daniel, Commanding. Staff : Lieuten- 
ant C. E. N. Julihn, Adjutant; First Battalion, Major 
J. N. Hoover, Jr., Commanding ; Second Battalion, 
Major J. S. Miller, Commanding ; Colored High School 
Battalion, Major C. K. Wormley, Commanding ; Lieut. 
Wm. O. Davis, Adjutant. 



THE ESCORT TO THE CAPITOL. 

II.— The Division constituting this escort will be 
composed of a brigade of U. S. Forces and the Brigade 
of the District of Columbia National Guard, and will 
move in the following order : 

Platoon of Mounted Police, Governor's Island Band, 
Grand Marshal, Gen. Horace Porter, Staff and Aids. 

FIRST DIVISION- Gen. Wesley Merritt, U. S. A., 
Marshal, Staff and Aids. 

First Brigade— Battalion of U.S. Engineers, Seven- 
teenth U. S. Infantry, U. S. Artillery (foot), Regiment 
U. S. Marines, Battalion U. S. Seamen, U. S. Light 
Artillery, U. S. Cavalry, Troop A, of Cleveland, Ohio, 
Personal escort to the President-elect. 

THE PRESIDENT AND PRESIDENT-ELECT. 
Detachment of Veterans of the 2jd Ohio Volunteers, 
the Vice- President-elect and the Senate Committee of 
Arrangements, Members of the Cabinet, the Major- 
General Commanding the Army, the Senior Admiral 
of the Navy. 

Second Brigade— Col. Cecil Clay, Marshal, District 
of Columbia National Guard. 

• «*««*• 

FROn CAPITOL TO WHITE HOUSE. 

The column will move in the following order: 
Platoon of Mounted' Police ; Governor's Island Band. 
Grand Marshal, General Horace Porter ; Staff, A. 
Noel Blakeman, Chief of Staff ; Col. H. C. CorWn, U. 
S. A., Adjutant-General ; Capt. John A. Johnston, 
U. S. A., Chief of Aids. Special Aids : Aids, Personal 
Escort of the President, Troop A, of Cleveland, Ohio ; 
the President; Detachment of Veterans of the 23d Ohio 
Voltmteers, Presidential Party in carriages. 

MILITARY GRAND DIVISION. 

Gen. Grenville M. Dodge, Chief Marshal; Gen. A. J. 
Hickenlooper, Chief of Staff ; Col. Joseph P. Sanger, 
U. S. A., Adjutant-General; Col. W. Cary Sanger, 
Inspector-General ; Major H. H. C. Dunwoody, Chief 
Signal Officer ; Capt. L. Wood, U. S. A., Medical Direc- 
tor ; Aids— Colonels Albert W. Swaim, R. Norman, C. 
Cadle ; Majors C. F. Humphrey, U. S. A., Geo. C. Reid, 
U. S. M. C, Allen McLane, J. W. Howard, E. A. Han- 
cock ; Captains Henry P. Kingsbury, U. S. A., A. M. 
Puller, U. S. A., Thomas Cruse, U. S. A., G. H. Patrick, 
J. E. Everest ; Lieutenants Hugh J. Gallagher, P. C. 
Kimball. 

FIRST DIVISION— Gen. Wesley Merritt, U. S. A., 
Marshal ; Col. J. B. Babcock, U. S. A., Adjutant-Gen- 
eral. Aids— First Lieutenants L. H. Strother, U. S.A.; 
Harry C. Hale, U. S. A.; T. Bentley Mott, U. S. A. 

First Brigade.— United States Forces: Col. John S. 
Poland, U. S. A. Commanding. Staff, Firjt Lieuts. 
Robt. W. Dowdy, U. S. A. and Wm. C. Wren, U. S. A. 
Battalion of Engineers, U. S. Army : Major John G. D. 
Knight, U. S. A., Commanding. Staff, First Lieuts. 
Wm. E. Craighill, U. S. A., E. W. Van C. Lucas, Seven- 
teenth U. S. Infantry. Major F. E. Tracey, U. S. A., 
Commanding. Staff. Regiment U. S. Artillery, Col. 
P. L. Guenther, U. 5. A., Commanding. Staff. Regi- 
OMot U. S. Marines. Li«ut.-Col. J. H. Higbee, U. S. 



SECOND DIVISION-Govemor Asa S. Bushnell, of 
Ohio, Marshal; General H. A. Axline, Adjutant- 
General. Staff, General W^m. P. Orr, Quartermaster- 
General ; Gen. I. K. Hamilton, Judge Advocate ; Gen. J. 
E. Lowes, Surgeon-General ; Colonel A. L. Conger, 
Chief of Engineers. Aids, Colonels R. J. McKinney, 
David L. Cockley, Geo. D. Wick, J. W. Barger, Chas. 
B. Wing, C. E. Burke, C. R. Fisher, I. Fleischmann, H. 
H. Pettyman, H. D. Knox, L. K. Anderson, H. A. 
Marting. 

First Brigade— Gen. L. Riggs, Marshal Penn- 
sylvania—Governor D. H. Hastings. Aids, Washing- 
ton Infantry, Capt. W. R. Geilfuss. New Jersey- 
Governor John W. Griggs; Gen. Wm. S. Stryker, 
Adjutant-General. Staff, Gen. Richard A. Donnelly, 
Quartermaster-General ; Gen. Joseph W. Congdon, 
Inspector-General ; Gen. Bird W. Spencer, Inspector- 
General of Rifle Practice ; Gen. Edward P. Meany, 
Judge Advocate-General. Aids, Colonels William 
Barbour, Shefield Phelps, Henry A. Potter, Anthony 
R. Kuser, Nathan Haines; National Guard, 2d Regi- 
ment, Col. Samuel V. S. Muzzy ; Essex Troop, Capt 
Frelingheusen ; Gatling Gun Company B, Capt. John 
R. Jones; Battalion Naval Reserve, Capt. Wm. H. 
Jaques. Connecticut — National Guard, Company L 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



3d Regiment, Capt. E. F. Kirkland. Massachusetts— 
Volunteer Militia ; Company B, ist Regiment, Capt. 
W. E. Lombard ; Company E, sth Regiment, Capt. J. 
U. Wescott ; Company C, 6th Regiment, Capt. Alex. 
Grieg, Jr.; Ambulance Corps, Lieut. VVm. Rolfe. 
Maryland — Governor Lloyd Lowndes. Staff, Gen. L. 
Allison Wilmer, Adjutant-General; Gen. Thomas S. 
Mumford, Inspector-General ; Gen. Alfred E. Booth, 
Chief of Ordnance ; Gen. Ridgley B. Warfield, 
Surgeon-General. Aids, Colonels William E. Griffith, 
Seymour Mandelbaum, Clarence Hodson, Gerard T. 
Hopkins, Jr., Ira Tyler, Henry B. Wilcox, Micajah 
W. Pope. National Guard, First Brigade, Gen. 
Lawrason Riggs ; Col. J. P. Phipps, Adjutant-General ; 
Col. J. S. Saunders. General Inspector; Col. Robt. W. 
Johnson, Chief Surgeon ; Major Chas. R. Spence, 
Chief Quartermaster; Major Allen McLean, Judge 
Advocate ; Major. Frank W. Coale, Chief Commissary 
Aid ; Lieut. Markham Marshall ; 4th Regiment, Col. 
Willard Howard ; 5th Regiment, Col. Frank Markoe ; 
ist Regiment, Col. Wm. P. Lane; Battalion Naval 
Reserves. Lieut. -Commander J. E. Emerson; First 
Separate Company, Capt. William Spencer. 

Second Brigade— Gen. David S. Gordon, U. S. A., 
Retired, Marshal ; Capt. Richard W.Tyler, Adjutant- 
General ; Aids, Col. Morgan D. Lewis, Lieut. Samuel 
H. Jacobson, S. Edward Redfem, Clarence Moore, B. 
B. Bradford, Sanders Garland. New York : Governor 
Frank S. Black; Gen. C. W. Tillinghast, Adjutant- 
General; Staff, Gen. M. O. Terry, Surgeon-General; 
Gen. Benj. Flagler, Chief of Ordnance ; Gen. Howard 
Carroll, Chief of Artillery; Gen. Henry T. Noyes, Com- 
missary-General; Gen. Edward M. Hoffman, Inspector- 
General ; Gen. Wm. M. Kirby, Inspector Rifie Practice ; 
Gen. S. F. Kneeland, Judge-Advocate-General; Gen. 
Warren M. Healey, Paymaster-General ; Gen. Wm, 
Henry Hughes, Quartermaster-General. Aids, Capt. 
H. L. Satterlee, Cols. Albert J. Myer, H. B. Moore, Jr., 
H. W. Sackett, I. F. Doyle, Jr., Fred C. Ham, E. E. 
Britton, Geo. C. Treadwell, Major J. C. Burbank, 
U. S. A. National Guard : 71st Regiment, Col. 
F. V. Greene ; Company — , 13th Regiment, 

Capt. ; Company — , 14th Regiment, Capt. 

; Company — , 23d Regiment, Capt. ; 

Company — , 47th Regiment, Capt. . Virginia : 

Company C, ist Regiment, Capt. B. W. Sullivan. 
North Carolina— State Guard. Company C, iSt Regi- 
ment, Captain J. H. Crawford ; Company F, 4th Regi- 
ment, Captain T. W. Bookhart ; Company G, 4th 
Regiment, Captain W. A. Caldwell ; Battalion Naval 
Reserves, Lieutenant-Commander W. B. Morton. 
Rhode Island — Newport Artillery, Colonel A. A. Bar- 
ker. Newport Division Naval Reserves, Lieutenant 
L. G. Wilks. Vermont— National Guard. Battalion 
First Regiment, Colonel Geo. H. Bond, Commanding. 
Captain L. H. Estey, Adjutant ; Captain James E. 
Creed, Quartermaster ; Captains Frank L. Howe, I. 
F. Lambert, First Lieutenant Henry C. Soule. Com- 
pany K, ist Regiment, Captain H. B. Fillmore ; Com- 
pany M, ISt Regiment, Captain C. M. Brownell ; 

Company A, First Regiment, Captain ; Company 

I, First Regiment, Captain J. J. Estey. Kentucky- 
Governor Wm. O. Bradley. General D. R. Callier, 
Adjutant-General; Staff, Aids, State Guard ; ist 
Regiment, Colonel J. B. Castleman. 

Third Brigade— Governor Josiah Grout, Vermont, 
Marshal ; Gen. T. S. Peck, Adjutant General ; Gen. 
W. H. Gilmore, Quartermaster General ; Capt. H. E. 
Tutherly, U. S. A., Assist;nt Inspector General. Aids, 
Cols. Geo. W. Doty, John C. Clark, E. G. Osgood, Chas. 
E. Nelson, John A. Fletcher, Erastus Baldwin, Curtis 
A. Hibbard, Stewart Haskell, W. Seward Webb, 
Myron M. Parker, Albert A. Chandler, Chas. A. Con- 
verse, John J. Warden, Thomas J. Hannon, Major 



Chas. L. Woodbury, Capt. A. H. Grout. Ohio- 
National Guard : Companies F and G, sth Regiment, 
Capt. Chas. Zimerman ; 14th Regiment, Col. A. B. 
Coit ; Artillery, two Batteries . Illinois— Gov- 
ernor John R. Tanner, Gen J. N. Reese, Adjutant 
General. Staff, Cols. James B. Smith, J. R. B. Van- 
cleave, John W. Gates, William M. Crilley, Edwin 
Norton, Wm. S. Edin, Chas. W. Kapp, Henry Maxwell, 
Chas. E. Bleyer, Earnest Feckeer, Isaac Elwood, Wm. 
H. Glasgow, Dwight Wiman, Frank L. Smith, John 
Lambert, Fred. H. Smith, Isaac Lesem, Sargent 
McKnight, Stephen Littler, R. T. Higgins, Henry M. 
Hall, Randolph Smith, Warren W. Duncan, Capt. 
Eben Swift, U. S. A. National Guard : Chicago 
Hussar Squadron, Major E. L. Brand; Company 
C, 3d Regiment, Cept. S. R. Blanchard ; Company 
I, sth Regiment, Capt. E. C. Vickery ; Ninth Bat- 
talion, Illinois Volunteers, Major J. C. Buckner. 
Texas — Volunteer Guard. Company C, 6th Regiment, 
Captain N. Lapowski. Iowa — Governor Francis M. 
Drake. General H. H. Wright, Adjutant-General. 
Staff, General James T. Priestley, Surgeon-General ; 
Colonel Harry H. Canfield, Chief Signal Officer ; Major 
Wm. C. Wyman, Military Secretary. Aids, Colonels 
J, K. P. Thompson, J. D. McGarraugh, E. C. Pratt, F. 
C. Letts, D. C. Glasser, H. W. Huttig, W. R. Manning, 
Chas. F. Luce, F. E. Drake, L. Kinkead, F. Clarkson, 
R. Nutting. Wisconsin — Governor Edward Scofield. 
General Chas. R. Boardman, Adjutant-General; 
Brigadier-General Charles R. Boardman ; General 
Oscar B. Zwiefusch, Quartermaster-General ; General 
Frederick W. Byers, Surgeon-General ; Colonel George 
Graham, Inspector Small Arms Practice. Aids, 
Colonels William J. Boyle, Harry S. Fuller, William J. 
Anderson, Moses R. Doyon, Wm. C. Brunder, Sey- 
mour W. Hollister, Hoyt A. Winslow, Arthur C. 
Keyes, George D. Breed, Wm. C. Ginty, Andrew L. 
Kreutzer, Wm. K. Coffin, Simon J. Murphy, Jr., Harry 
H. Coleman, Wm. A. Brown, I. Watson Stephenson, 
Wm. H. Young, George A. Whiting, George W. Wing, 
Lieuts. Wm. L. Buck, John C. W. Brooks. Minnesota 
—National Guard. Company D, ist Regiment, Captain 
C. S. Bean. Washington, D. C— Capitol City Guards, 
Captain A. Ackwith ; Butler Zouaves, Captain A. 
Oglesby; Butler Infantry Corps, Captain Benj. Young. 

THIRD DIVISION— Veteran Organizations : Gen. 
O. O. Howard, U. S. A. (retired). Commanding ; 
Gen. S. S. Burdette, Chief of Staff ; Colonel Meysen- 
berg. Senior Aid. Aids, Col. L. Edwin Dudley, Gen. 
Jno. P. P. Donahue, Gen. Thomas J. Cannon, Capt. 
Joseph Kuchli, Capts. A. A. White, Porter R. Alger, 
Henry C. Wilde, George W. Rush, E. E. Dougherty, 
C. C. Speed, G. W. Johnson, Henry C. Smith, John 
Bowers, Capt. Nathan B. Prentice, Maj. R. S. Lacy, 
Maj. A. H. G. Richardson, Maj. John McElroy, Maj. 
Andrew J. Huntoon, Capt. William Gibson. Capt. 
Bernard T. Janney, Dr. J. R. F. Appleby, Col. Chas. 
P. Lincoln, Alvin S. Taber, Rev. Howard Wilbur 
Ennis (S. of V.); Capt. A. S. Perham, Gen. John L 
Curtin, Capt. C. D. Ames, Major W. R. D. Blackwood, 
Capt. Wm. A, Ogden, Lieut, John Richards. Old 
Guard, Capt. James E. Edgar. 

First Brigade — Department of the Potomac, G. A. R. ; 
Gen. Thos. S. Hopkins, Department Commander; 
Major Arthur Hendricks, Assistant Adjutant-General ; 
Major J. Tyler Powell, Assistant Quartermaster- 
General ; G. A. R. Post Commanders, i8q7 ; John A. 
Rawlins Post, No. 1, R. B. Schwickardl, Commander; 
Kit Carson Post, No. a, L. F. Randolph, Commander ; 
Lincoln Post, No. 3, John Bresnahan, Commander ; 
O. P. Morton Post. No. 4, James Wells, Commander; 
Geo. G. Meade Post, No. 5, Calvin Famsworth, Com- 
mander ; John P. Reynolds Post, No. 6, Fred. C. Calvert, 
Command«r ; Jam»s A. Oarfisld Post, No. 7, A. H. 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



Frear, Commander ; Burnside Post, No. 8, George C. 
Ross, Commander ; Charles Sumner Post., No. 9, T. W. 
West, Commander ; Farragut Post, No. 10, A, F. Dins- 
more, Commander; Charles P. Stone Post, No. 11, J. 
Tyler Powell, Commander ; U. S. Grant Post, No. 12, 
Wm. H. Henning, Commander ; John A. Logan Post, 
No. 13, T. J. Putnam, Commander ; Phil. Sheridan 
Post, No. 14, Alfred Shaw, Commander ; George H. 
Thomas Post, No. 15, E. P. Entriken, Commander ; 
Henry Wilson Post, No. 17, Jacob F. Moore, Com- 
mander ; Potomac Post, No. 18, S. C. Robb, Com- 
mander ; Geo. U. Morris Post, No. ig, Fred. Storch, 
Commander ; Lafayette Post, No. 20, M. A. Dillon, 
Commander. 

Second Brigade — Visiting Posts and Comrades; the 
Union Veteran Legion, Gen. John P. Donohue,National 
Commander ; the Union Veteran Union, Major-Gen. 
Thomas J. Cannon. Veteran Organizations: York Rifle 
Association, A. Loucks ; Sheridan Post, No. 12, G. A. R., 
D. W. Young, Commander ; Lincoln Post, No. 7, G. A. 
R., J. D. Oliver, Commander ; Department of Potomac, 
U. V. U., Gen. Thos. J. Cannon, Commander; General 
Guy V. Henry Post, Regular A. and N. U., G. W. 
Washington, Commander; John A. Logan Commander, 
No. 2, U. V. U., Adjt. S. F. Hamilton; Logan Camp, 
No. 2, S. of v., Capt. G. S. Whitmore. 

CIVIC GRAND DIVISION. 

B. H. Warner, Marshal ; Thomas C. Noyes, Adjutant- 
General ; Gen. Benj. Butterworth, Chief of Staff. 
Aids^Joseph Auerbach, Hon. Park Agnew, Virginia ; 
Fred G. Alexander, T. E. Altemus, A. D. Addison, 
Aug. J. Burgdorf, Walter A. Brown, Dr. Aaron 
Baldwin, Thomas W. Buckey, Frederick Benjamin, 
Dr. W. R. Blakesee, Dr. Birney, J. Kemp Bartlett, 
Joseph A. Blundon, Maryland ; H. F. Bauer, Col. Wm. 
L. Bramhall, Capt. Frank Bang, New York ; Frank L. 
Brown, W. C. Bickford, Reuben F. Baker, Augustus 
Burgdorf, W. H. Bowman, Frederick H. Bugher, Hon. 
Joseph D. Brooks, Maryland ; Joseph H. Bradley, 
Wm. Windom Brackett, Hon. Thomas H. Baker, 
Tennessee ; B. F. Crawshaw, Chas. L. Cook, Pennsyl- 
vania ; Arthur C. Camp, David Cranmer, W. 
A, Copenhaver, Arthur Cowsill, G. J. Corsey, 
Illinois; Wright Curtis, Howard L. Christman, 
N. D. B. Chase, Maryland ; L. L. Coghill, Virginia ; 
Harry A. Cobaugh, John Case, Prof. J. A. 
Cassidy, Maryland ; W. I. Collamer, A. H. Cralle, W. 
T. S. Curtis, Jonathan Cilley, J. B. Colgrove, Robert 
Carmody, C. C. Carlton, Chas. H. Dailey, Maryland ; 
Julian C. Dowell, Maryland; J. B. Darnall, John J. 
Dickson, Robert H. Doyle, H. Bradley Davidson, 
Addison G. Dubois, Maryland ; William Dickson, 
Samuel A. Drury, Col. E. C. De Saque, Pennsylvania ; 
Capt. John R. Doles, Virginia ; J. Demonet, E. C. 
De Lauder, Maryland ; Dr. Florence Donohoe, Capt. 
O. E. Duffy, C. C. Duncanson, William T. Davis, L. S. 
Emery, John Joy Edson, H. J. EUicott, W. K. Ellis, 
Abram Frey, E. B. Fox, Robert S. Fletcher, Hon. 
Samuel G. French, Dr. John R. Francis, Wm. J. 
Feaga, Maryland ; Theodore L. Gatchel, C. W. 
Gesner, Harry P. Godwin, John M. Griffin, Virginia ; 
William Galliher, Chas. L. Gurley, Andrew Gleeson, 
William Gude, Dr. A. M. Green, S. Herbert Giesy, 
Fred. C. Gieseking, C. V. Gates, H. J. Gross, Benja- 
min S. Graves, Wm. Hammersley, Charles Howard, A. 
H, Hect, Maryland ; Dr. J. B. Hawes, New York ; 
Charles Hurkamp, Virginia ; Wm. H. H. Hart, A. T. 
Hensey, Dr. G. H. Heron, Carl Hoffman, John B. 
Hammond, Gaillard Hunt, J. Henry HolMhu, Mary- 
land ; C. H. Ingram, Prof. B. T. Janney, W. H. Jones, 
Maryland ; Ralph Jones, Maryland ; Dr. Ralph Jenkins, 
Charles B. Jones, Maryland ; Thad. Jones, C. Parker 
Jones, Maryland ; Charles Kraemer, Charles Eahlo, 



Indiana ; Frank Keys, Maryland ; C. B. Keferstein, J. 
Fred. Kelly, A. J. Kane, Thomas J. King, Dr. J. M. 
Lamb, Henry B. Looker, Geo. C. Lewis, Prof. J. M. 
Langston, Arthur Long, Pennsylvania ; D. F. Lamo- 
reau, John B. Lamer, Major C. H. Lawrence, Mary- 
land ; Meyer Loeb, Gustav Lansburg, Robert M. 
Larner, C. Dana Lincoln, J. A. Leeds, Pennsylvania; 
A. F. Lake, Massachusetts ; Alex. B. Legare, Jos. 
Mathy, David Moore, A P. McMillan, Dr. E. M. 
Mannakee, Colton Maynard, H. C. McCauley, Frank 
Moore, Felix E. Mahoney, Henry Merz, Maryland, 
William Mearns, H. Leroy Mark, Charles McDonald, 
Ferdinand Miller, Carroll Mercer, Frank P. Metzger, 
Harry Mannakee, Maryland ; Captain Frank Nolen, 
Maryland; P. J. Nee, C. S. Nettles, South Carolina; 
Harry B. Needham, New York ; D. F. Nolan, James 
C. Napier, Tennessee : Robert J. Nicholson, Rev. 
Robert Nourse, Virginia ; W. A. Orcutt, David F. Orro, 
Maryland ; James P. O'Laughlin, Frederick Page, 
Maryland; Ezra D. Parker, Hon. J. S. Porter, 
Virginia; H. P. Plant, Florida; R. Humphrey 
Perry, Maryland ; R. P. Pettit, Dr. C. B. 
Purvis, H. B. Polkinhom, George W. Pratt, John 
W. Pilling, Frank Porter, Maryland ; Calvin Rosen- 
thal, Capt. J. C. Ransehausen, Springfield, Mass.; Cuno 
H. Rudolph, Preston Ray, Maryland ; W. F. Roberts 
W. H. E. Reinecke, A. P. Rowe, Virginia ; Major N. m! 
Rittenhouse, Maryland ; Elmer E. Ramey, R. E. Red- 
way, Dumont D. Rogers, New York ; Wm. H. Rupp, 
Chas. C. Rogers, W. M. Roberts, New York ; M. Rosen- 
berg, Louis G. Richardson, C. Root, Col. W. E. Rogers, 
Col. Daniel Ramey, Capt. W. A. Rogers, Francis D. 
Smith, L. C. Strider, L. A. Stagg, Mortimer Stabler,. 
Maryland ; Frank Smith, Virginia ; Thomas W, 
Smith, D. Lindlay Sloan, Maryland ; C. Solon Steven- 
son, New York ; Edwin Sutherland, C. C. Simmons, 
Pennsylvania ; Lawrence Sands, Wm. Small, John W. 
Schaeffer, J. H. Small, Theodore Swayze, New York ; 
Edward Sefton, L. A. Wartzell, Dr. F. J. Shadd, 
Frank B. Smith, S. S. Shedd, R. H. Stone, 
C. G. Sears, Geo. W. Silsby, Jesse R. Sherwood, Dr. 
Charles G. Stone, Ralph W. Stone, Allan B. Swords, 
New York ; J. Albert Schaeffer, E. W. Screven, South 
Carolina ; Arthur Stabler, Maryland ; F. H. Thomas, 
J. B. Thompson, Captain W. R. Thorp, J. P. Taylor, 
Pennsylvania ; Col. W. H. Telford, Pennsylvania ; N. 
T. Taylor, H. C. Towers, Major H. R. Torbert, Mary- 
land , Col. B. H. Taylor, Maryland ; Col. John R. Tol- 
bert. South Carolina : R. B. Vincent, Maryland ; Col. 
Geo. W. F. Vernon, Maryland ; John C. Wilson, Wm. 
P. Wilson, Maryland ; Henry L. West, Geo. W. 
Wroten, Virginia ; W. D. West, E. M. Willis, J. I. 
Weller, Alex. Wolf, O. W. White, Oscar Wolf, Mary- 
land ; Dr. D. H. Williams, Joseph F. Weber, Dr. F. J. 
Woodman, L. C. Williamson, Wm. Whitson, Jr., Chas. 
Welch, Maryland ; Franklin Wiltse, John F. Wilkins. 
E. E. Walker, Horace Wylie, J. E. Webster, Maryland ; 
Elphonso Youngs, S. M. Yeatman. Escort, Americus 
Republican Club, Pittsburg, Pa., Samuel D. Hubard, 
Major ; James A. Gordon, Louis R. Davidson, Captains; 
M. G. Leslie and W. J. Hamilton, First Lieutenants \. 
A. N. Hunter, Charles Heminhouse, Second Lieu- 
tenants. 

FIRST DIVISION-D. D. Woodmansee, President 
National League Republican Clubs, Marshal ; Chief 
of Staff, Gen. James K. Howe ; Adjutant-General, 
Hon. Wm. S. Booze. Aids— W. H. Atwell, F. B. 
Brownell, W. E. Bundy, Frank L. Case, H. de B. Clay, 
Horace M. Deal, F. H. Greer, S. L. Hain, Chas. E. Ink, 
R. R. Knowles, Chas. Leach, F. F. Meyer, Jr., C. W. 
Raymond, D. A. Robinson, M. R. Sulzer, D. L. Sleeper, 
Richard Yates, L. J. Crawford, W. P. McCreary, 
Everett Warren, C. A. Atkinson, F. H. Morris, H. H. 
Burgess, H. H. Blunt, Walter P. Corbett, V. P. Clay- 



OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



ton, E. L. Gregory, E. G. Gray, A. M. Higrias, Vrank 
S. Monnett, Andrew James, K. J. Miller, A. L. Morri- 
son, Geo. W. Ruch, George Stone, Uadore Se1»el, Luke 
T. Walker, Scott Bonham, F. L. Edinborough, John J. 
Sullivan, Wm. Edgar'Rogers. Escort-Young Men's 
Blaine Club, Cincinnati, Ohio. Fred BadSb Com- 
mander. 

First Brigade-Col. J. A. Wie«aer«hetm, rennsyl- 
vania, Marshal. Delaware : Youag Men's Republican 
Club, Wilmington, E. Mitchell, Jr., Commander, 
Pennsylvania: David A. Martin Club, Plilliulf>lphia. 
John H. Bromley, Commander; Allegheny County 
Six Footers' Club, Pittsbtirg, W. E. Thompson, Major; 
J. Harry Corbett, Murray Liviagatone, Captains; 
William R. Leeds Association, Philadelphia, Thomas 
W. Cunningham, Commands ; Continental '76 Club, 
Philadelphia, James E. Romig, Commander ; Union 
Republican Club, Philadelphia, Henry Johnson, Com- 
mander ; United RepubUcan Oub, ajth Ward, Phila- 
delphia, Col. Thomas J. Powers, Commander ; A. C. 
Harmer Ctab, Philadelphia, \»mc D. Hetxell, Com- 
mander; Henry K. Boyer M&rcWng Club, Philadel- 
phia, Hanson Lee, Commander ; 1st Ward M. S. Quay 
Club, Philadelphia, John Plnley, Commander; 
National Fremont Association, PlttaJmrg, Major R. H. 
Long, Commander; Survlrors' Harmony Fire Com- 
pany Philadelphia, Thomas Iteltoy, Commander; A. 
C Harmer Club, Germantown, Pa., O. Deiter, Com- 
mander; T. Whartman T. Lodge, AMi«t*nt; James L. 
Goodan Association, Philadelphia, Prank R. Burton, 
Commander. 

Second Brigade-Honorable Murat Halstead, Ohio, 
Marshal. Staff, Matthew 8. Qttay Club, Phfladelphia, 
Alfred W. Lewis, Commander; David Whiting, 
Assistant; Indian School Battalion, Carlisle, Pa., W. 
G Thompson, CammAwUr. New Jersey-Freling- 
huysen Lancers, Newark, N. J., W. L. Fish, Major; 
L T Vreeland, H. S. Smith, Jesse R. Salmon, Cap- 
tains; Hudson County Delegation o£ New Jersey, 
Colonel S. D. Dideinsoa, Commander, Lincoln Club' 
Bloomfield, N. J., WlUiam Biggart, Commander; 
Garret A. Hobart Association, Newark, N. J., 
Wm KttTbler. CoiBmand«r ; Republican Indian 
League of New York, B. L. Conklin, Marshal. 
Georgia-Atlanta McKinley Ctab, Atlanta, Ga., T. H. 
Martin, Commander. Maryland-Delegation from 
Honesty Money League, Baltimore, W. O. Bechen- 
baugh. Marshal; Council No. 5, Union League of 
America, Baltimore, George W. Washington, Com- 
mander ; 14th Ward Social Republican Club, Balti- 
more Phillip H. Lenderking, Commander; ist Ward 
Active Republican Club, i.th Ward Permanent Repub- 
lican League, United Republican Club of Cnsfield, 
jist Ward Young Men's Republican Club, i6th Ward 
Republican Association, 16th Ward Republican Asso- 
ciation CNo. 2), isth Ward Lloyd Lowndes Club, 7th 
Ward Republican Association, 6th Ward Monumental 
League iSt Ward James G. Blaine Club, 5th Ward 
Republican Association, ^th Ward Progressive Re- 
publican Club, nth Ward Citizens' National Repub- 
lican Club (No. I), 4tb Congressional District Republi- 
can Association, wth Ward Social Republican Club, 
nth Ward Coronella Club. 



HCOND DIVISION- Hon. J. Franklin Fort, New 
Jersey, Marshal ; Staff ; Escort, Young Men's Repub- 
lican Club, Baltimore, W. W. Johnson, Marshal 

First Brigade— Hon. Thos. P. Irey, Georgia, Marshal 
Staff ; 10th Ward Keystone Plea»ure Club ; Logan 
iBvinoibles ; J. H. Hall Club, Anne Arundel County; 
Shiloh D. E. Mudd Club, Charles County; Young 
Men's Republican Club, Blkridge, Howard County ; 
Alpha Republican Oub, 3d Di«trict, Howard County ; 
©arfield Republican Club, Prince George County, 7th 
District ; Republican Club, Anne Arundel County, iSt 
District; 30th Ward Republican Club, Baltimore; 
Gorman- American Uncoln Club ; Log Cabin Club. 
District of Columbia : McKinley and Hobart Uniform 
Club, Col. John Bowles, Commander ; McKinley Tariff 
League, Louis WiUia, Commander ; Virginia Repub- 
lican Association, J. H. Harrison, Commander; 
McKinley and Hobart Club, Capt. Wm. Neal, Com- 
mander ; S. M. Cullum National Republican Associa- 
tion, Jesse Jonea, Commander. Virginia : Shenandoah 

Valley Patriotic Legion, , Marshal ; Spring Hill 

Club, No. I, Charles Dean, Commander ; Orion Social 
Clubi R. A. Paul, Commander ; CitUens' Auxiliary 
Horse Club, J. 8. Smith, Commander ; C. P. Hunting- 
ton Republican Club. 

Second Brigade-Honorable Richard . Cochran, 
New York, Marriial. Staff. New York-The Quigg 
Legion, Major Jastro Alexander, Commander ; River- 
side Republican Club, New York, E. Twyeffort, Com- 
mander ; Riverside Republican Club, New York, Thos. 
Crane, Commander ; Unconditional Republican Club, 
Albany W. B. Mix, Commander; Active Hook and 
Ladder' DrUl Company, CobleskiU, P. C. Clark, Com- 
mand** ; Hellgate RepubUoan Club, New York, John 
C Graham, Commander. North Carolina-Forsythe 
Republican Club, Winston, N. C, P. H. Lybrook, 
Commander. Kentucky -John McKnight Republican 
Club, Covington, Ky., John McKnight, Commander ; 
Garfield Club, Louisville, Ky., William Schuff, Com- 
mander 

THIRD DIVI510N-Hon. J. A. T. HuU, Iowa, Marshal; 
Staff; Escort, Minneapolis Republican Flambeau 
Club, A. Q. Rogers, Commander. 

First Brigade— Hon. Warren P. Sutton, Michigan, 
Marshal; Staff. Ohio-Tippecanoe Club, Cleveland, 
John H. Blood, Commander; Stamina Republican 
League, Cincinnati, James K. Stewart, Commander ; 
Chas. L. Kurtz Republican Club, Columbus, Major E. 
G. Bailey, Marshal. Indiana-Tippecanoe Club, Fort 
Wayne, Ind., W. A. Sprice, Commander. Illinois- 
Cook County Republican Marching Club, Chicago, 
William F. Knoch, Commander 

Second Brigade-Marshal; Staff; Chicago Republi- 
can Club, C. Harrison Frost, Commander ; Commer- 
cial McKinley Club, Col. George H. Greene, Com- 
mander ; Original Colored Men's McKinley Club, 
Richard A. Dawson, Commander. Michigan-Alger 
Republican Club, Detroit, Commander. Florida- 
Florida Colored Traffic Association, M. M. Moore, 
I Commander. West Virgina-Elkins Cadets, Wheeling, 
W. H. Travis, Commander. 



By Command of General Horace Porter. 

A. NOEL BLAKEHAN, Chief of Staff. 








BjSTERBROOR'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 




66 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



THE INAUGURATION 

OF 

HON. WILLIAM McKINLEY, OF OHIO, 

As President of the United States, 

AND 

HON. GARRET A. HOBART, OF NEW JERSEY, 

As Vice-President of the United States. 



CEREMONIES AND PARADE, March 4, J 897. 



On this day at high noon, on the east portico of the Capitol, in the presence of a 
mighty audience, Hon. William McKinley, a citizen of the State of Ohio, will have ad- 
ministered to him by Chief Justice Melville Fuller of the U. S. Supreme Court, the solemn 
oath prescribed for this impressive occasion, which confirms him as President of the 
United States. Preceding this event by a few minutes, the Hon. Garret A. Hobart, a 
citizen of Mew Jersey, will have had the oath of his office as Vice-President of the United 
States administered to him in the Senate Chamber, by the President pro tempore of that 

august body. 

CEREMONIES AT THE CAPITOL. 

In the Senate Cfiamber. 

The first of the Inaugural Ceremonies at the Capitol will take place within the Senate 
Chamber, to which only those holding cards of admission will be admitted. President 
Cleveland and President-elect McKinley will be escorted by members of the Senate 
Committee on Arrangements, and will proceed to the Capitol and go to rooms assigned to 
them respectively, until the time for their appearance within the Chamber. Meantime the 
members of the House of Representatives, the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of 
the Supreme Court of the United States and the Diplomatic Corps will be announced and 
conducted to the seats provided for them within the Chamber. President Cleveland and 
his Cabinet will be received, and then the President-elect. At 12 o'clock, noon, Vice- 
President Stevenson will deliver his valedictory and declare the Senate adjourned .?/>/<!• die. 
Immediately thereafter the President pro tempore of the Senate will, by virtue of the call 
for an extra session of that body, assume the Chair, and the Vice-President-elect will be 
sworn in. He in turn will administer the oath to the new members of the Senate. After 
this ceremony has been completed, the Senate will adjourn for the day, when all present 
will proceed to the platform erected at the east portico of the Capitol, where the President- 
elect will delive." his address in the presence of the assembled multitude. At its conclusion, 
the oath of office will be administered by the Chief Justice, who will face the vast audience 
and declare the Hon. William McKinley President of the United States, which concludes 
the ceremonies at the Capitol. The members of the Senate, upon completion of the above 
ceremonies, will return to the Senate Chamber, preceded by the Sergeant-at-Arms, the 
Vice-President and the Secretary of the Senate ; and the President will be escorted by the 
Inaugural Procession to the White House. 

The close of this simple ceremony of inauguration, which will thus transfer the high- 
est offices of the nation to new hands, will be the culmination of one of the most exciting 
contests in the nation's history, involving as it does the surrender by one and the assump- 
tion by another political party of the executive functions of the government of the United 
States. This great event will be signalized by the applause of the people, gathered 
from all parts of the Union to witness it, by the martial music of bands, the waving 



ESTERBROOK'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 




63 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMOXIES. 

CEREMONIES AT THE CAPITOL— Continued. 

of flags and banners, and the salute of cannon, whose echoes will not have died away 
before every city of the Union will have learned what has transpired. 

As President and Vice-President-elect, Mr. McKini.kv and Mr. Hokart will have been 
escorted to the Capitol, along Pennsylvania Avenue, by a splendid military divisior', ai 
escort composed in part of U. S. Troops, Marines, Sailors, the National Guard oc the 
District of Columbia, and the specially designated personal escort of the Presideut and 
Vice-President. 

The ceremonies at the Capitol being over, the Gran'^ Parade f)f the day will take 
place, and the procession duly formed will proceed up the avenue, north side, escorting 
President McKinley to the Executive Mansion. Arriving at the south front of the 
Treasury, the President's carriage will leave the line of parade and drive through the 
Executive Grounds to the White House, where the President will take position m the 
grand stand prepared for him, and review the parade as it passes. 

At dusk will come the illumination of the city, including all public as well as private 
buildings. The culmination of these out-door celebrations will be the display of fireworks 
to be set off on the large vacant spaces near the Washington Monument. 

An appropriate end of the day's festivities will be the grand reception, known as the 
Inaugural Ball, tendered to the President and Mrs. McKinlev and to the Vice-President 
and Mrs. Hob art at the Pension Building, in Judiciary Square. 

Concerts have been arranged for Friday and Saturday, at nominal prices, in the 
great ball room, so that ample opportunity is assured all visitors to hear the band, the 
orchestra, and the chorus of five hundred voices, as well as to inspect the beautiful decora- 
tions of the room, which will remain intact for these occasions. 



NORTH. 



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CARRIAGES OX NIGHT OF INAUGURAL BALL.- 



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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE IXAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 69 



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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 71 




Hazard Lasher, 
President. 



Spencer Lathrop, 
Sec'y & Treas. 



Molleson Brothers Company, 

Wholesale Paper Dealers, 

No. 18 Beekman Street, 

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Correspondence Solicited. 

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H. B. McCLELLAN, General Eastern Agent, 
387 Broadway, New York. 



J. RAMSEY, Jr., 

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St. Louis, Mo. 



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72 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

NAMES OF STUDENTS OF THE CARLISLE INDIAN SCHOOL who will participate 
in the Inaugural Parade, ako their Tribes and date of entering Carlisle. 




BAND. 



Sergt. Wolfe, George — Cherokee. 
Adams, Joseph— Siletz, '93. 
Archiquette, Josiah — Oneida, 'gi. 
Arquette, James — Puyallup, '96. 
Cajune, Frank — Chippewa, '95. 
Depoe, Robert — Siletz, '93. 
Gansworth, William — Tuscarora. 
Hardison, Benjamin — Navajo, '96. 
Hill, Abram C— Oneida, '98. 
Isaac, Abram — Chippewa, '94. 
Johnson, Matthew — Tuscarora, '93. 
Lawyer, Corbett — Nez Perce, '93. 
Marshall, Thomas — Sioux, '94. 
McDonald, Louis — Ponca, '96. 

"A" 
Capt. Whitethunder, C — Sioux, '83. 
1st Lieut. Hudson, Frank — Pueblo, '86. 
2d " Shively, Frank — Crow, '90. 
1st Sergt. Kawaykla, James — Apache, '87 

" Kernosh, William — Caddo, '89. 

" Teenabikezen, P. — Apache, '87. 

" Wheelock, Martin — Oneida, 'go. 

" Ratley, William — Cherokee, 'g6 

Corp. Redwater, T. —Cheyenne, '96. 
'* Pierce, Hawley — Seneca, 'gs. 
" Henry, Timothy — Tuscarora, 'g6. 
Antoine, Charles — Sioux, '95. 
Archiquette, Chauncey — Oneida, '90. 
Arthur, Henry — Pima, '96. 
Beard, Simon — Sioux, '95. 
Bent, Charles — Cheyenne, '95. 
Blind, Henry — Arapahoe, 'g6. 



McFarland, David — Nez Perce, '91. 
Northrop, Ge<>ri;e — Alaskan, '96. 
Peters, Casper — Tuscarora. 'g6. 
Peters, Wilbur — Tuscarora, '95. 
Printup, Harrison — Tuscarora, '92. 
Reed, Amos — Oneida, '95. 
Taylor, Ralph — Sioux, '95. 
Webster, John — Oneida, '89. 
Welch, Wilson — Cherokee, '93. 
Wheelock, James R. — Oneida. 'Sg. 
Adjutant, ist Lieut. Blackbear, Jos.— 

Cheyenne, '89. 
Sergeant-Major, Cayou, Frank — Omaha,'93. 

COMPANY. 

Buckheart, Jacob — Shawnee, 'g6. 
Cleveland, Grover — Araphoe, '96, 
Connor, Geo. — '90. 
Crouse, Fi'ank — Seneca, '91. 
DeGray, Arthur — Sioux, '95. 
Decora, Henry — Winnebago, '96. 
Denny, Wallace — Oneida, '96. 
. ■ Eastman, Chris. — Sioux, '96. 

Flynn, Thomas — Assiniboine, '90. 
Frass, George — Cheyenne, '95. 
Green, James — Ottawa, '95. 
Hare, Nelson — Seneca, '92. 
Henrv. Lester — Tuscarora, '95. 
Hill, Walter— Oneida, '95. 
Johnson, Mark — Sioux, '96. 
Lawrence, Frank — Si';ux, 'g6. 
Leider, Hugh — Crow, '88. 



EjSTERBROOR'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 





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74 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



CARLISLE INDIAN SCHOOL PARADE— Continued. 



'A" COMPANY— Continued. 



Littlehawk, William — Sioux, '92. 
Mcintosh — Apache, '92. 
McCauley, Albert— Omaha, '94. 
McDougal, Alex. — Chippewa, '90. 
Merango, Baptiste — Flathead, '93. 
Metoxen, Amos — Oneida, '91, 
Mi'.ler, James— Chippewa, '94. 
Miller, Wallace — Oneida, '96. 
Mishler, Charles— Chippewa, '95. 
Nash, Albert— Winnebago, '95. 
Oga, Edward— Chippewa, '95. 
Palmer, Simon — Stockbridge, '96. 
Powlas, Whitney — Oneida, '90. 
Pontiac, Samuel— Chippewa, '94. 



Redkettle. Henry — Sioux, '91. 
Rogers, Charles — Chippewa, '94. 
Saunook, Joseph — Cherokee, '93. 
Scott, Frank — Seneca, '95. 
Sherrill, Wm. — Cherokee, '93. 
Smith, Edwin — Clallam, '96. 
Smith, Taylor — Oneida, '90. 
St. Cyr, Frederick — Winnebego, 96. 
Suis, George — Crow, '96. 
Walker, Joshua — Ottawa, '8g. 
Whiteeyes, Frank— Sioux, '95. 
Wolfe, Wm. — Cheyenne, '96. 
Williams, Wesley — Chippewa, 94. 
Yelloweyes, John — Cheyenne, 96. 



"B" COMPANY. 



Capt. Hayne, Paul— Assiniboine, '90. 
ist Lieut. Ricker, Ezra— Sioux, '90. 
2d Lieut. Tsamauwa, Perry — Pueblo, '85. 
ist Sergt. Jones, Frank — Sac and Fox, '95. 

•' " Thomas, Frank — Cowlitz, '94. 

•' " Lemieux, John— Chippewa, '95. 

" " Kawi, John — Pueblo, '94. 

" " Blackcloud, A. — Chippewa, '92. 
Corp. Miller. Samuel— Stockbridge, '91. 

" Peters Scott — Chippewa, '96. 

" Cornelius, Joel — Oneida, '91. 
Arquette, John — Oneida. 
Adams, Quincey — Assiniboine, '90. 
American horse, Joseph — Sioux, '92. 
Andrew, Arthur — Pima, '96. 
Bacon, George, Assiniboine, '90. 
Barker, Samuel — Osage, '94. 
Beale, Frank — Clallam, '96. 
Bearrobe, John — Cheyenne, '96. 
Cusick, Wilson — Tuscarora, '97, 
Carrefell, George — Chippewa, '96. 
Charles, Bert — Alaskan, '96. 
Craig, Joseph — Puyallup, '96, 
Fletcher, Christopher — Clallam, '96 
Garrick, John — Spokane, '96. 
Hill, Abraham — Oneida, 95. 
Hoag, Edward — Arapahoe, '96. 
Jessan, Dahnola — Cherokee, '94. 
Juan, Jose — Pima, '96. 
Kenoi, Thomas — Pima. '96. 
Lewis, Ambrose — Pima, '96. 



Lonebear, Samuel — Sioux, '92. 
Long, Peter — Cherokee, '94. 
Mames, Warren — Fima, '95. 
Mawsaw, Clarence — Pima, '95. 
Mitchell, Ben. — Chippewa, '96. 
Moore, Rienzi — Sac and Fox, '91. 
Nada, Wm. — Ottawa, '96. 
Nerva, Henry — Pima, 9;. 
Nichols, Ollie— Assiniboine, '91. 
Niles, Herman — Stockbridge, '96. 
Owlingwish, Stephen— Mission, '96. 
Penn, Frank — Cheyenne, '94. 
Pego, Enos — Chippewa, '89. 
Pesueh, Torey — Pueblo, '96. 
Powlas, Chauncej^ — Oneida, '93. 
Powlas, Emmanuel — Oneida, '92. 
Rickard, Frederick— Tuscarora, '96. 
Robbins, John — Pima, '96. 
Romero, Julio — Mission. '96. 
Russell, James — Winnebago, '96. 
Smith, Kirk — Sioux, 'go. 
Schuyler, Joseph — Oneida, '94. 
Silas, Albert— Oneida. 'SS. 
Stewart, Thomas — Crow, '88. 
Sweesy, Carl — Arapahoe, '96. 
Sword, Allen H. — Cheyenne, '96. 
Thompson, Charles — Chippewa, '96, 
Vakevoy, Norris — Pima, '95. 
Vavages, Juan — Pima, '95. 
Webster, Lafayette — Oneida, '95. 
Wilde, Byron — Arickaree, '96. 



'C" COMPANY. 



Capt. Jamison, Jacob — Seneca, '92. 
1st Lieut. Nahtailsh, V. — Apache, '87. 
2d Lieut. Tapia, Antonio — Pueblo, '93. 
ist Serg. Brown, Samuel — Sioux, '95. 
Smith, Chester — Osage, '90. 
" Hopkins, Mark — Apache, '91. 

" Couture, J»Iichael— Chippewa, '94. 

" Pierce, Is^'ewton — Seneca, "95. 

Corp. Miller, Artie — Stockbridge, '91. 
Eolista, Alphonso — Apache, '87. 
" Taylor, Robert — Osage, '94. 
" Bigjim Goliah — Cherokee, '94. 
Beaver, Frank — Winnebago, '94. 



Bigfire, Walter — Winnebago, '96. 

Blackchief, Allen — Seneca, '91. 

Blodgett, Joseph — Flathead, '93. 

Buffalomeat, Raymond — Cheyenne, '96, 

Burr, Sidney — Alaskan, '94. 

Cadot, Peter — Cui, '91. 

Chekekah, Fidleus — Osage, '95. 

Colby, John — Chippewa, '95. 

DeMarr, Peter — 

Domeah, Clay — Apache, '87, 

Enos, Daniel, Pima, '96. 

Epchose, Juan — Pima, '96. 

Eprico, Carlos — Pima, '96. 



ESTERBROOK'g PENS ARE THE BEST. 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 75 



The 

J^uxurj/" of 
gmo^ing 




depends upon the tobacco, not the pipe. If you would \iZWQ the greatest 
luxury there is in a smoke, fill your pipe with 

LORILLARD'S 



ROSE LEAF 



A delicately blended combination of old, sweet, redried leaf from the 
Golden Belt of Virginia and North Carolina. "ROSE LEAF" is not 
excelled and seldom equalled by the highest price fancy smokings. Ask 
your dealer for it. 

5 GENTS PER 2 OUNCE PACKAGE. 






A better Cocktail at home than is served over any bar in the World. 

(OCKTAILS 

MANHATTAN, MARTINI, 

WHISKEY, HOLLAND GIN. 
TOM GIN, VERMOUTH and YORK. 

We ^arantee these Cocktails to be made 
of absolutely pureand well matured liquors 
and the mixing equal to the best cocktails 
served over any bar in the world. Being- 
compounded in accurate proportions, they 
will always be found of uniform quality. 

Connoisseurs agree that of two cocktails 
made of the same material and propor- 
) lions the one which Is aged must be the 
,' better. 

Try our YORK Cocktail made without 
any sweetening— dry and delicious. 
For Sale on the Dining and Buffet Cars 
'' of the principal railroads of the U. S. 

AVOID IMITATIONS. 

^^i For Sale by all Druggists and Dealers. 

G. P. HEUBLEIN & BRO., Solo Props., 

39 Broadway, vi. Y., Hartford, Conn. 20 Piccadilly, W. London. Eng. 




76 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE IXAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



CARLISLE INDIAN SCHOOL PARADE-Continued. 
*'C" COMPANY— Continued. 



Ezhuna, Joseph — Apache, '87. 
Feather, John, Menominee, '96. 
Forrest, Bedford — Assiniboine, '90. 
Greenbird, William — Chippewa, '93. 
Hendricks, Richard — Papago, '95. 
Henslej', Edward — Winnebago, '95. 
Hinman, William — Ottawa, '90. 
Johnson, Archie, Pottawattoniie, '95. 
Johnson Robert B. — Nez Perce, '93. 
Jordan, Cornelius — Oneida, '95. 
Jozhe, Benedict — Apache, '87. 
Libby, George — Chippewa, '94. 
Lowcloud, Charles — Winnebago, '93. 
McCarthy, Edgar — Osage, '91. 
Mitchell, Jonas S. — Chippewa, '89. 
Mooney, Thomas — Assiniboine, '91. 
Owl, Johnson — Cherokee, '96. 



Capt. Seneca, Isaac — Seneca, '92. 

ist Lieut. Cusick. Charles — Tuscarora, '92. 

2d Lieut. Upshaw Alex. — Crow, '88. 

ist Sergt. Morrison, Daniel — Chippewa, 'gi. 

" Murdock, Wesson — Assiniboine, '90. 

" Metoxen, Jonas — Oneida, 'gr. 

" Wasequam, I. — Ottawa, '89. 

" Cornelius, B. — Oneida, '91. 
Corp. Rogers, Edward — Chippewa, '94. 
" Ear, John — Sioux, '95. 
" Butler, Clarence — Coeur d'Alene. 
Andrew James — 
Alfred, Casper — Shawnee, '96. 
Armstrong, Ralph — Nez Perce, 90. 
Barada, Mitchell — Omaha, '94. 
Brown, Matthew — Clallam, '94. 
Campeau, Frank — Chippewa, '89. 
Charles, Wilson — Oneida, '94. 
Chutincut, Louis — Mission, '96. 
Colombe, William — Sioux, '95. 
Curtis, Louis — Chippewa, '95. 
Davis, Jesse — Nez Perce, '95. 
Fisher, James — Chippewa, '94. 
Flying, Joseph— Cheyenne, '94. 
George, Shon — Cherokee, '93. 
Greenbird, John — Chippewa, '94. 
Halftown, Lovett — Seneca, '91. 
Hanbury, Thomas — Alaskan, '93. 
Hudson, Robert — Seneca, '92. 
Johnson, Henry — Winnebago, '96. 



Parker. Asher — Cayuga, '92. 
Paul, Mitchell— Ottawa, '96. 
Peterson, Edward — Ehuek. '95. 
Pradt, George — Pueblo, '96. 
Quarters, Louis — Chippewa, '90. 
Shelafo, George — Chippewa, '94. 
Smith, Sirenus — Oneida, '95. 
Tapheos, Reuben — Cheyenne, '96. 
Thomas, Juan — Pima, '95. 
Thompson, Peter — Chippewa, '96. 
Trudell, Ralph — Sioux, '96. 
Valley, Edward — Chippewa, '96. 
Webster, Jesse — Oneida, '96. 
AVataghse, William — Menominee, '96. 
Wheelock, Elijah — Oneida, '96. 
Whitebear, Percy — Cheyenne, '96. 

D" COMPANY. 

Jones, Reuben — Onandago, '95. 
Kenjockety, Jesse — Seneca, '92. 
Kinfe, Andrew — Sioux, '95. 
Lodges, Henry R. — Arapahoe, '96. 
Lyon, Isaac Onondaga, '95. 
Mishler, Louis — Chippewa, '95. 
Morris, John C. — Oneida, '95. 
Pallado, Wm. — Chippewa, '96. 
Pavachima, Pablo — Pima, '96. 
Penasa, Jonah — Chippewa, '96. 
Pocatello, George — Shoshone, '90. 
Roberts, Chas. — Chippewa, '97. 
Romero, George — Cheyenne. '96. 
Rooks, Frank — Sioux, '95. 
Schildt, Joseph — Piegan, '93. 
Shomin, Sebastian — Ottawa, '96. 
Smith, Clark — Klamath, '94. 
Smith, John — Cheyenne, '96. 
Smith, Paul — Chippewa, '96. 
Standingdeer, Simon— Cherokee, '93. 
Stewart, Jack — Crow, '90. 
Tiosh, Thomas — Chippewa, "95. 
Trombla, Louis — Pottawattomie, '96. 
Tyndall, David — Omaha, '96, 
W^alker, Thomas — 
Wells, Joseph — Ottawa, '90. 
West. Daniel — Osage, '90. 
Whitebird, Dawes — Cheyenne, '96. 
Willing, Edward — Puvallup, '96. 



LEIADEIRS FOR ISST. 




THE- 



Model FT. MM 1 


25 


1/ 


STYLES. 


Price, $2.50. 


-J 



B. & W. Saddles 



HYGIENIQ RACING AND OTHER STYLES. 



Absolutely the highest grade on the market. For perfection In 
design, beauty of finish, quality of material, and co.r ort in riding 
they surpass all others. 

"the: butler & \a/ard go., 



IMENA/ARK, rsi. J., U. S. A. 



ESTERBROOK'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 77 



Men of [fashion 



Gndorse Our Spring Garments 



Wg Guarantee 
Them. 



Correct in Every Detail. 



SUITS OR TOP-COATS, $15.00 

....TO ORDEIR.... 
Tlie Boulevards and Promenades are full of them. 









Our BelhFitted Frocks are equal to the exclusive 

imported English Frock. 
All goods made in our own building, right over us, 

by skilled tailors. No sweat=shop work. 

eOHEN St e©M Tailors, 



N. W. Cor. Nassau and Ann Sts., 

entire: building. 



NEW YORK. 



105=107 Nassau St., 25, 27, 29 Ann St. 



78 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

PROGRAMME OF GRAND AERIAL FIREWORKS DISPLAY 

(In Grounds South of the White House) 

By Pain's Fireworks Co., New York, on the occasion of the "Inauguration of President 
McKinley," Washington, D. C, March 4th, 1897. 



1. Salute of loi Aerial Guns. 

2. Illumination of the Grounds, Monument, &c., with 300 Colored Fires — Red, White 

and Blue. 

3. Display of 150 6 and 8-pound Congreve Rockets, fired from three positions. 

4. Display of 50 24 inch Bombs, Manhattan Beach Tints. 

5. Ascent of 100 Tourbillions or Fiery Whirlwinds. 

6. Flight of 100 15-inch Bombs — Golden Cloud studded with Jewels — fired by electricity. 

7. Display of 25 Pain's Mammoth 8-pound Rockets, with Hanging Chains of Iridescent 

Fire. 

8. Salvo of 500 Saucisson Mines. 

9. Display of 20 30-inch Bombs — all the latest novelties and effects. 

10. Flight 50 6-pound Rocket — Aerial Searchlight. 

11. Display 25 Mammoth Rockets — Gold and Silver Threads. 

12. Display of 10 Pain's Mammoth 36-inch Bombs. 

13. " Old Glory" one mile high. Immense Pyrotechnic. United States Flag, 500 x 250, 

unfurled in the sky. Pain's patent, 1892, as given at the World's Fair, Chicago, 
Manhattan Beach and on the occasion of the Water Parade, N. Y., October, 1896. 

14. Flight of 50 15-inch Shells — Peacock's Plume — fired by electricity. 

15. Ascent 25 6-pound Rockets — National Streamers. 

16. Battery 1,000 Silver Snakes. 

17. Flight of 50 i3)^-inch Bombs — Torrents of Illuminated Gold. 

18. Ascent of 25 6-pound Rockets. (Pain's World's Fair Specialties.) 

19. Battery of 20 Cracker Mines. 

20. Magical Illumination of the Capitol with 1,000 pounds Composition. 

21. Flight of 20 24-inch Bombs — Changing Stars. 

22. Twenty large Batteries Pain's Chromatic Candles. 

23. Flight 20 8-pound Pain's Sextuple Rockets. 

24. Display 10 Pain's Quadruple Bombs — opening Red, changing to White, thence to 

Blue and finishing with Hanging Chains. (1897 Novelty.) 

25. Twenty 6-pound Rockets — Liquid Fire. 

26. Flight of 100 i3)^-inch Bombs — "The Rainbow — fired by electricit/, 

27. One Electric Shell, lighting up the whole of the city. (New compound.) 

28. Finale Flight of 3.000 large Colored Rockets, forming the " Inauguration BougtTCT." 

29. Grand Feu de Joie. 

30. After the display Pennsylvania Avenue will be illuminated with variegated Colored 

Fire at frequent intervals. 

Subject to Change. 

EjSTERBROOK'S PENS ARE THE BEST' 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



THE SAFETY CAR HEATING 
AND LIGHTING COMPANY - - 

160 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, 

Pintsch System Car and Buoy Lighting. 

This Company controls in the United States the celebrated 
Pintsch System of Car and Buoy Lighting. It is economical, 
safe, efficient, and approved by Railway Managers and the 
Light House Board of the United States, and has received 
the highest awards for excellence at the World's Expositions 
at Moscow, Vienna, St. Petersburg, London, Berlin, Paris, 

Chicago and Atlanta. 
Seventy thousand cars, 
three thousand two 
hundred locomotives, 
and five hundred and 
sixty buoys are equip- 
ped with this light. 

Street Railway 
Lines 'j^ ^ %H 

This system of light- 
ing has also been 
adopted by the Broad- 
way and Third Avenue 
Cable Lines of New 
York; the North and 
West Chicago and the 
Chicago City Railway 
Lines of Chicago ; the 
Olive Street Railway, 
.. ofSt.Louis;the 

Columbus Central Electric Line of Columbus, Ohio; the Metro- 
politan Street Railway of Kansas City, and the Denver Cable Lines 
of Denver, Colorado. These roads have 2,400 cars equipped with 
this Light. 

CAR HEATING by Steam Jacket System, Hot Water Circulation, 

Return and Regulating Direct Steam Systems* 
AVTOMATIC STEAM COUPLERS. 




-i-rgfT'-^'- 




HON. B. H. WARNER, 

Chairman of Civic Committee and Grand Marshal Civic Parade, who will have for 

Escort in the Parade the Americus Republican Club of Pittsburg, Pa., 

with 150 men and the famous Sheridan Sabre Band. 



EjSTERBROOK'g PENS ARE THE BEST. - 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. St 



CONFIDENCE FULLY RESTORED. 



THE FUTURE TRANSPARENT." 





President William McKinley as he appears in afternoon and 
evening -wear designed and made by 





- i-m ^ 



MEN'S TAILOR, 

292 Fifth Avenue, 
Bet. the Holland and Waldori 

New York. 



OUR SELF-MEASUREMENT FORMS MOST CORRECT. 

PATTERNS Nos. 271 and 798 MAILED ON REQUEST. 



S2 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE JSAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

THE CIVIC DIVISION. 
CLUBS AND PATRIOTIC ORGANIZATIONS IN LINE. 

Hon. B. H. WARNER, Grand Marshal. 

StaflE of 200 Aids and Special Escort of Americus Republican Club of Pittsburg, Pa., and 

the Sheridan Sabre Band. 



This Division is formed in the order in which the States they represent were admitted to 
the Union or signed the Constitution. 



First Wm. McKinley Club of the U. S., Philadelphia, Pa.; silk hat, light overcoat, 
black pants, badge, necktie, cane and kid gloves; in command of C. E. Mason; 150 men, 
with band of 25 pieces. 

Americus Republican Club, Pittsburg, Pa. ; red, white and blue umbrella, red badge, 
black suit with white plug hat, white tie and white gloves; in command of Major Samuel 
D. Hubby; men, with band of 30 pieces. 

Hell Gate Republican Club, New York, N. Y. ; light drab coat, light Fedora hat, 

badge, cane and gloves; in command of John C. Graham; men, with band of 16 

pieces. 

William R. Leeds Association, Philadelphia, Pa. ; high silk hat, uniform overcoat, 
black pants, kid gloves, canes and badges; in command of Thos. W. Cunningham; 150 
men, with band of 35 pieces. 

Shenandoah Valley Patriotic Legion, Harrisonburg, Va. ; gray slouch hat, gray 
mackintosh lined with blue; 2,000 men, with band. 

David A. Martin Club, Philadelphia, Pa. ; high hat, black cheviot overcoat, cane, 
gloves and badge; in command of John H. Bromley; 250 men, with band of 43 pieces. 

Union Republican Club, Philadelphia, Pa.; silk hat and dark coat; in command of 
Hervey Johnson ; 100 men. 

McKinley and Hobart Club, West Washington, D. C. ; cap and mackintosh coat; 
in command of Capt. William Neal; 7;; men, with band. 

Young Men's Blaine Club, Cincinnati, O. ; regulation overcoat, white plug hat, cane 
and gloves; in command of Fred. Bader; 350 men, with band of 50 pieces. 

Allegheny County Six Footers' Club, Pittsburg, Pa. ; blue swallow tail coat trimmed 
mth cavalry yellow, white duck pants, black fur shako; in command of J. Harry 
Corbett; ico men, with band of 12 pieces. 

Mathew S. Quay Club, Philadelphia, Pa. ; slate-colored overcoat and high silk hat; 
in command of Alfred W. Lewis; 75 men, with band of 16 pieces. 

Young Men's Republican Club, Baltimore, Md. ; light mackintosh. Derby hat, kid 
gloves, flag and cane; in command of W. W. Johnson ; 150 men, with band. 

Henry K. Boyer Republican Marching Club, Philadelphia, Pa. ; silk hat, steel gray 
overcoat, black pants, kid gloves and cane umbrella; in command of Hanson Lee; 75 
men, with band of 25 pieces. 

Survivors' Harmony Fire Company, No. 6, Philadelphia, Pa. ; fire hat, belt, coat, black 
pants and red shirt; in command of Thomas Kelley ; 30 men, with band of 20 pieces. 

Alger Republican Club, Detroit, Mich. ; yellow dress coat and blue trousers; 60 to 75 
men, witli band. 

McKinley and Hobart Uniform Club, Washington, D. C. ; .silk hat, dark blue over- 
coat with cape, gold badge bearing portrait of McKinley and Hobart, and cane; in com- 
mand of Colonel John Boles; 100 men, with band. 

ElSTERBROOR'S PENS ARK THE BEST. 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 83 



i®®®®®(sxs)®®®®®®®(s^ 



®®®®®(SX*XSXS)Q^ 

Singers 



OVER 



LEAD THE WORLD 



13,000,000 MADE AND SOLD 




HIGHEST 

AWARDS at the 
WORLD'S 
COLUMBIAN 
EXPOSITION 




For Excellence 

of Design, 

Excellence of 

Construction, 

Regularity of Motion, 

Ease of Motion, 

Great Speed, 

Adjustability, 

Durability, 

Ease of Learning, 

Convenience of 

Arrangement. 



IF Y0U BUY You will receive care- 
7j CIAIOI?!? ^^^ instruction from a 

" SUMvitiK competent teacher at 

your home. You can obtain necessary 
accessories direct from the Company's 
offices. You will get prompt attention in 
any part of the world, as our offices are 
everywhere; and we give careful attention 
to ail customers, no matter where their 
machine may have been purchased. You 
will be dealing with the leading sewing- 
machine manufacturers in the world, having 
an unequaled experience and an unrivaled 
reputation to maintain — the strongest 
guarantees of excellence and fair dealing. 



SINGER SEWING MACHINES ARE SOLD ONLY BY 

The Singer Manufacturing Co. 

OFFICES EVERYWHERE. 

g)®®®(fiXSXSXS®®®®®®®® 



Somerset Qub 



(^ 




Absolutely- 
Pure ^ ^ 

Very Old 
Delicious 
Flavor ^ 




DISTILLED IN MARYLAND 

Acknowledged by Connoisseurs to have no superior. 
Recommended by physicians for invalids and those needing stimulants. 

USED BY FAMILIES, CLUBS, CAFES AND HOTELS. 



Sample bottle sent free upon receipt of 25 cents express charges. 

Edw. B. Bruce & Co., ^ Baltimore, Md. 



84 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONJES. 

CIVIC AND PATRIOTIC ORGANIZATIONS-Continoed. 

Minneapolis Republican Flambeau Club, Minneapolis, Minn.; full dress Mexican; in 
command of A. Q. Rodgers; somen. 

S. M. Cullom National Republican Club, Washington, D. C. ; blue coat, pants, vest, 
white gloves, black Derby hat and overcoat; in command of Jessie Jones; 75 men. 

United Republican Club, Philadelphia, Pa. ; hght-colored mackintosh, black silk hat, 
dark trousers, white tie, kid gloves, cane with flag, and badge of club; in command of 
Colonel Thos. J. Powers; 75 men, wnth band. 

The Tippecanoe Club, Cleveland, O. ; black suit overcoat, silk hat, cane, badge; in 
command of John H. Blood ; 300 to 500 men, with band, 

Stamina Republican League, Cincinnati, O. ; black silk hat, black overcoat, cane, 
badge and gloves; in command of James H. Stewart; 300 men with band. 

Unconditional Republican Club, Albany, N. Y. ; black clothes, black silk hat, tan 
gloves, cane, patent leather shoes and club badge; in command of Wm. B. Mix; 150 men, 
with band of 25 pieces. 

James L. Goodall Republican Association, Philadelphia, Pa. ; black overcoat, high 
silk hat, kid gloves, umbrella and cane; in command of Frank R. Burton; 75 men, with 
band. 

Florida Colored Traffic Association, Orlando, Fla. ; mackintosh with cape, beaver hat, 
black pants and yellow badge; in command of M. M. Moore; 50 men. 

Frelinghuysen Lancers, Newark, N. J. ; double-breasted white broadcloth regulation 
officer coat; officers have regulation shoulder knot with red strap, cadet blue trousers 
(officers red stripe with white edge, and private white stripe, red edge), white duck helmet 
(officers white plume, privates red), white fatigue cap, private carry nickel lance with red 
staff, officers, sword; in command of Major W. L. Fish; 150 men, with band. 

First Ward M. S. Quay Club, Philadelphia, Pa. ; black suit, light overcoat and black 
silk high hat; in command of John Finley ; 100 men, with band. 

National Fremont Association, Pittsburg, Pa.; citizen's dress: in command of Major 
R. H. Long. 

Commercial Marching Club, No. i, Chicago, 111. ; in command of Col. Geo. N. Green; 
200 men, with band. 

Cook County Republican Marching Club, Chicago, 111. ; black cutaway suit, black box 
overcoat, silk hat, umbrella, cane, blue silk badge and white tie ; in command of Wm. F. 
Knoch ; 300 men, WMth band of 50 pieces. 

Wm. McKinley Tariff League, Washington, D. C. ; black pants, blue mackintosh, 
black beaver and cane; in command of Bolden Evans; 75 men, with band. 

Tippecanoe Club, Fort Wayne, Ind. ; silk hat, black overcoat and suit, brown gloves 
and umbrella; in command of Capt. W. A. Sprice; Somen, with band. 

John McKnight Republican Club, Covington, Ky. ; light hat and mackintosh, cane 
and badge; in command of John McKnight; 200 men, with band. 

Elkins* Cadets, WTieeling, W. Va. ; Annapolis fatigue coat, black braid, white duck 
trousers and cadet cap; in command of Captain W. H. Travis; 150 men. with band. 

Council No. 5, Union League of America, Baltimore, Md. ; blue mackintosh, slouch 
hat with gold cord; in command of Geo. W. Washington ; 150 men, with band of 20 pieces. 

Young Men's Republican Club, Wilmington, Del. ; dark coat, light, soft hat, gloves, 
badge and cane; in command of E. Mitchell. Jr. ; 150 men, with band of 21 pieces. 

Virginia Republican Association, Washington, D. C. ; dark coat and pants, gold hats, 
badges and light gaiter tops; in command of J. H. Harrison; too men, with band. 

Garret A. Hobart Association, Newark, N. J. ; light brown overcoat and silk hat; in 
command of Wm. Kurbler; 100 men. 

Jas. L. Goodall Republican Association, Philadelphia, Pa. ; black cutaway, overcoat, 
high hat, cane and gloves ; in command of Frank R. Burton ; 60 men. 

Garfield Club, Louisville, Ky. ; dark Prince Albert coat, black slouch hat, badge and 
cane; in command of Wm. Schuif; 100 men. 



ESTERBROOR'S PENS ARE THE BEST. 




OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 85 



INIATIONAL IMPORTANCE!! 



TRY 
THE 



ALPHA 



PLASTIC RUBBER 
E RAS E R ^ «^ «j« v^ *i« «^ 



This erasive rubber is specially prepared to erase lead pencil marks, and to remain 
plastic. It can be readily formed into any desirable shape, and is very quick and 
clean in erasive effect, while it does not injure the surface of the paper. 
The genuine is always blue ; beware of imitations. 

As an introduction, one sample mailed free, upon receipt of \Qq^ 

PARKER, STEARNS & SUTTON, Manufacturers, 

228 South Street, New York City. 



Fluting- 





fHEQNLY 



t/EHTlLATIHG 

IJ)RESS6HIE1)D 



Patented May 26, 1896. 

CURES -<■ 
PREVENTS 

EXCESSIVE 
PERSPIRATION. 



By every movement ot the arm, the moist air is forced out of the flutings, and fresh dry air is 
drawn in, thereby keeping the body cool and preventing the perspiration from accumulating. 

This gives comfort, prevents odor, and insures health to the wearer. Possesses Strength with 
extreme lightness. Is impervious without clumsiness, and soft as down. The fluting adds to the 
elasticity and prevents tearing. 

Are the lightest and most substantial shields known. They are made of selected pure Para 
Rubber, rendered absolutely odorless by an improved process. 

They can be washed and will always retain their fluted shape. 

They contain no sulphur, and are soft and pliable. 

Every pair is warranted. Sold by all dealers. 

A sample pair mailed to any one address upon receipt of 25c. 

PARKER, STEARNS «Sc SUTTON, 

227, 228 & 229 South Street, New York, U. S. A. 



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86 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

CIVIC AND PATRIOTIC ORGANIZATIONS-Continued. 

Continental '76 Club, Philadelphia, Pa.; black silk hat, novelty cane with flag; in 
command of James E. Romig; 100 men, with br.nd of 25 pieces. 

Lincoln Club, Bloomfield, N. J.; in command of Wm. Biggart; 55 men. 

Riverside Republican Club, New York City. 

Original Colored Men's Club, Chicago. 111. ; black silk hat, umbrella, steel gray ulster, 
lavender tie, gloves, badges and banners ; in command of Richard Allen Dawson ; 100 
men. 

Carlisle Indians, Carlisle, Pa. 

Spring Hill Club, No. i, Odricks Corner, Ash Grove, Va. ; dark Alpine hats, black 
pants, blue shirts, sailor collars, belts and leggings; in command of Chas. Dean; 100 men, 
with band of 15 pieces. 

Honest Money Democratic League, Wage Earners' Democratic Club, and Law and 
Order Commercial Travelers' Democratic League. 

Quigg Legion. 

Orion Social Club, Richmond, Va. ; black silk hats, black clothes, white overgaiters 
and gold badge; m command of Capt. R. A. A. Paul; 60 men. 

Chicago Republican Club, Chicago, 111. ; black business suit, terra cotta kid gloves, 
black silk umbrella, black Fedora hat and badge ; in command of C. Harrison Frost ; 900 
men, with band. 

Active Hook and Ladder Drill Company, Cobleskill, Schoharie Co., N. Y. ; white 
Prince Albert coat, blue pants, nickel helmet and plume ; in command of P. S. Clark ; 26 
men. 

Fourteenth Ward Social Republican Club, Baltimore, Md. ; black mackintosh, light 
hat, cane and American flag; in command of Philip H. Lenderking; 100 men. 

Republican Indian League, New Jersey, Newark, N. J. ; dark clothes, Derby hat, 
badge, cane and gloves; in command of E. L. Conklin; 250 men, with band. 

Atlanta McKinley Club, Atlanta, Ga. ; dark overcoats, and silk hats ; in command of 
*]" H. Martin ; 200 men. 

Forsyth Republican Club, Winston, N. C. ; in command of P. H. Lybrook; 60 men. 



GOVERNORS OF STATES AND STAFFS PARTICIPATING IN PARADE. 

GOVERNOR AND MILITARY STAFF, NEW YORK: 
Frank S. Black, Governor. 

Major-General C. Whitney Tillinghast, 2d, Adjutant-General. 
Brig. -Gen. M. O. Terry, Surgeon-General. 

Benjamin Flagler, Chief of Ordnance (not likely to be in Washington, 

D. C, on March 4th). 
Howard Carroll, Chief of Artillery. 
Henry T. Noyes, Commissary-General of Subsistence. 
Edward M. Hoffman, Inspector-General. 
William M. Kirby, General Inspector of Rifle Practice. 
S. F. Kneeland, Judge Advocate-General. 
Warren M. Healey, Paymaster-General. 
William Henry Hughes, Quartermaster-General. 
Captain Herbert L. Satterlee, Naval Militia, Aide-de-Camp. 
Colonel Albert J. Myer, 

" Harrison B. Moore, Jr., 
Henry W. Sackett, 
John F. Doyle, Jr., 
Fred. C. Ham, 
E. E. Brittnn, 

George C. Treadwell, Military Secretary, 
Major Jas. B. Burbank, 3d Artillery, U. S. A., on duty with staff. 



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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 87 



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88 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES, 

GOVERNORS OF STATES AND STAFFS PARTICIPATING 

IN PARADE, 

GOVERMOR AND MILITARY STAFF. VERMONT: 

His Excellency, Josiah Grout, Governor and Commander-in-Chief. 
Bvt. Maj.-Gen. Theodore S. Peck, Adjutant-General. 

•' " William S. Gilmore, Quartermaster-General. 

Captain Herbert E. Tutherly, ist U. S. Cavalry, Assist Inspector-General. 
Colonel George W. Doty, Aide-de-Camp. 

" John C. Clark, 

" Edward G. Osgood, " 

Charles E. Nelson, " 

" John A. Fletcher, " 

'• Erastiis Baldwin, •* 

" Curtis A. Hibbard, " 

" Stewart Haskell, •• 

•• W. Seward Webb. 

•• Myron M. Parker " 

♦• Albert B. Chandler, " 

'• Charles A. Converse, *• 

" John J. Warden, " 

Lt. -Colonel Thomas J. Hannan. 
Major Charles L. Woodbury. 
Captain Aaron H. Grout. 

GOVERNOR AND STAFF, PENNSYLVANIA: 

Governor D. H. Hastings. 

Major-General Thos. J . Stewart, Adjutant-General. 

" " Wilbur F. Reeder, Asst. Adjutant-General. 

Brigadier-General Edward Morrell, Inspector-General. 

" B. Frank Eshleman, Judge Advocate General. 

" " Albert J. Logan, Quartermaster-General. 

«• " Thomas Potter, Jr., Asst. Quartermaster-General. 

•• " Esra H. Ripple, Commissary-General. 

*• " Lewis W. Read, Surgeon-General. 

•• " Thomas J. Hudson, Chief of Artillery. 

'• " Asha Minor, General Inspector of Rifle Practice. 

Colonel Henry H. Coon, Aide-de-Camp. 

" Henry Hall, 

•• Chas. H. Hull, " 

" James Elderson, Jr., " 

" Millard Hunsiker, " 

" W. Fred. Reynolds, '* 

" James M. Reid, " 

«• Robert B. Baker, " 

" Geo. Knox McKane, " 

" Lloyd B. Huff, " 

•• Harry C. Trexier, ** 

•• Frederick W. Sutterle, " 

GOVERNOR AND STAFF, MARYLAND: 

Governor Lloyd Lowndes. 

Major-General L. Allison Wilmer, Adjotant«General. 
Brigadier-General Thomas S. Mumford, Inspector-GeneraL 
•' Alfred E. Booth, Chief of Ordnance. 

" •' Ridgley B. War field, Surgeon-General. 

Major Chas. R. Spence, Acting Quartermaster-General. 
Colonel Wm. E. Griffith, Aide-de-Camp. 

" Seymour Mandelbaum, 

•♦ Clarence Hodson, 

" Gerard T. Hopkins, Jr., 

•* Ira Tyler, 

" Henry B. Wilcox, 

" Micajah W. Pope, 



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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



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go OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

Governors of States and Staffs Participating in Parade — Continued. 

GOVERNOR AND STAFF, NEW JERSEY. 

Hon. John W. Griggs, Governor of New Jersey. 
General William S. Stryker, Adjutant-General. 

" Richard A. Donnelly, Quartermaster-General. 

" Joseph W. Congdon, Inspector-General. 

" Bird W. Spencer, Inspector-General of Rifle Practice. 

" Edward P. Meany, Judge Advocate-General. 
Colonel William Barbour, Aide-de-Camp. 
Sheffield Phelps, " " 

" Henry A. Potter, " •' 

" Anthony R. Kuser, " " 

" Nathan Haines, " " 

THE GOVERNORS AND STAFFS of the following States have signified their 
intention of being present : 

Illinois. Governor John R. Tanner. 

General C. C. Hilton, Adjutant General. 

Iowa. Governor Francis M. Drake. 

General H. H. Wright, Adjutant General. 

Kentucky. Governor William O. Bradley. 

General D. R. Collier, Adjutant General. 

Ohio. Governor Asa S. Bushnell. 

General H. A. Axline, Adjutant General. 

"Wisconsin : Governor Edward Scofield. 

Gen. Charles King, Adjutant-General. 



MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS. 

U. S. TROOP. Strength. 

17th Infantry, Columbus Barracks, Ohio, 500 

I Light Battery, 5th Artillery, Fort Hamilton, N. Y., 70 

I Light Battery, ist Artillery, Washington Barracks, 70 

8 foot batteries of Artillery, Washington and Fort Monroe, .... 4S0 

1 Battalion Engineers (4 companies), Willett's Point and West Point, . . 250 

I Regiment Cavalry (8 troops), Fort Meyer and Fort Ethan Allen, . . 500 

Battalion Marines (Navy Yard, Washington, D. C.) 120 



DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA NATIONAL GUARD, 

General Cecil Clay commanding. 



REGIMENT HIGH SCHOOL CADETS, . 

Colonel Frank R. Daniels. 



BATTALION HIGH SCHOOL CADETS (Colored), 

Major Clarence K. Wormley. 



1250 



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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. qc 

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92 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 



MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS IN PARADE— Continued. 
STATE NATIONAL GUARD ORGANIZATIONS: 

Connecticut: 

Company I, 3d Regiment, C. N. G., Capt. E. F. Kirkland, 

Illinois: 

Company I, 5th Regiment, I. N. G., Capt. E. C. Vickery, 
Company C/sd Regiment, I. N. G., Capt. S. R. Blanchard, . 
Chicago Hussar Squadron, Major E. L. Brand, 
9th Battalion Illinois Volunteers (colored). Major J. C. Buckner, 

Kentucky: 

ist Regiment, Kentucky State Guard, Col. J. B. Castlemaa. 

Maryland: 

ist Regiment, M. N. G.. Col. 



4th Regiment, M. N. G., Col. Willard Howard, 
5th Regiment, M. N. G., Col. Frank Markos, 
Battalion, Naval Reserves, Lieut.-Com'dr Edwin Geer, 

Massachusetts: 

Company B, ist Regiment, M. V. M., Capt. W. E. Lombard, 
Company E, 5th Regiment, M. V. M., Capt. J. U. Westcott, 
Company C, 6th Regiment, M. V. M., Capt. Alex. Grieg, Jr., 
Ambulance Corps, M. V. M., Lieut. William Rolfe, 

Minnesota: 

Company D, ist Regiment, N. G. 

Nebraska: 

Company L, ist Regiment, Capt. W. J. Foye, 

New Jersey: 

Company C, 3d Regiment, N. G., N. J., Capt. W. H. DeHart, 
Essex Troop, Capt. FreUngheusen. 



M., Capt. C. S. Bean, 



New York : 

71st Regiment, N. ©. N. Y., Col. F. V. Greene 

One company from each Brooklyn regiment — the 13th, 14th, 23d, and 47th, 
225 men, and 25 officers. 

North Carolina: 

Company C, ist Regiment, N. C. S. G., Capt. J. H. Crawford, 
Company F, 4th Regiment, N. C. S. G., Capt. T. W. Bookhart, 
Company G, 4th Regiment, N. C. S. G., Capt. W. A. Caldwell, 
Two Divisions, Naval Reserve, N. C. S. G, Lieut.-Com'dr W. B. Morton 

Ohio: 

Cleveland City Troop, O. N. G., Capt. 



2d Regiment, O. N. G., Col. J. A. Kuert, .... 
5th Regiment, O. N. G., Col. C. L. Kennon, .... 
14th Regiment, O. N. G.. Col. Alonzo B. Coit (two battalions), 
Two Batteries Artillery, 



Pennsylvania: 

Washington Infantry, Capt. W. R. Geilfus, . . . . 

Rhode Island: 

Newport Artillery, Col. A. A. Barker, 

Newport Division Naval Reserves, Liout. L. G. Wilks, 

Texas : 

Company C. 6th Regiment, T. V. (5d., Capt. N. Lapowski, 

Vermont: 

Company K, ist Regiment, V. N. G., Capt. H. B. Fillmore, 
Company M, ist Regiment, V. N. G.. Capt. C. M. Brownell, 
Company I, 1st Regiment, V. N. G.. Capt. J. J. Estey, 

Washington, D. C, Independent Companies ; 

Old Guard, Capt. J. F. Edgar, 

Capital City Guards (colored) Capt. Abram Ackwith, 
Butler Zouaves (colored), Capt. Alex. Oglesby, . . 
Butler Zouaves, Infantry Corps (colored), Capt. Benj. Young. 



70 

50 
50 

400 
300 

500 
700 
750 
150 

50 
65 
60 
50 

40 



80 

75 



550 



60 

45 

45 

125 



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450 

200 

80 

80 



130 
60 



40 

51 

51 
51 

50 
40 
30 
65 



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OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 93 



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94 OFFICIAL PROGRAMME OF THE INAUGURAL CEREMONIES. 

MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS IN PARADE— Continued. 

GRAND ARMY 

In command of Gen. O. O. Howard. 

Gen. S. S. Burdett, Chief of Staff. 

Some of the organizations composing this division are as follows; 

Department of Potomac, G. A. R. . 

Department or Potomac, U. V. U. , Gen. Thos. J. Cannon, . . . 600 

Department of Potomac, U. V. L., ....... 

York Rifle Ass'n (Veteran Organization), York, Pa. Commander , 

Milton Post, No. 129 G. A. R., Milton, Pa., H. C. Sticker, 

J. A. Logan Camp, Sons of Veterans, Capt. G. S. Whitmore, . . 25 

MARCH 4-THE PRESIDENTL\L ESCORT. 

The Escort, under the command of General Horace Porter, Grand Marshal, will 
consist of United States troops, marines and sailors, commanded by General "Wesley 
Merritt and the National Guard of the District of Columbia, commanded by General Cecil 
Clay. Also, Troop A, Cleveland, Ohio, which will act as special escort to the President- 
elect. 

The President and Vice-President-elect will leave their hotels on the morning of 
March 4, and proceed to the White House, where, in conjunction with a joint committee 
of Congress, they will take carriages in front of the building, and proceed to their respect- 
ive places in the line of Escort between the United States Troops and the District National 
Guard. 

General Horace Porter, Grand Marshal, will ride at the head of the Escort, accom- 
panied by his Staff and Aides. The Escort will proceed via 15th Street and Pennsylvania 
Avenue to and around the south side of the Capitol to its east front, along the east front 
to Senate wing, where the Presidential party will proceed to the Senate Chamber and 
participate in the Inaugural Ceremonies, the Escort meanwhile moving around East 
Capitol Square until its right rests on the corner of New Jersey Avenue and B Street, 
where it will await the signal of cannon announcing the ceremonies are at a close, and the 
procession ready to move. 

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^ f3-22&,,3 



